Truro News

Event heightens awareness of growing societal problem

- BY JOSH HEALEY

Signs will be posted throughout Truro this weekend shining the spotlight on a growing problem.

In keeping with Truro’s Ride For Refuge, sobering statistics and facts about human traffickin­g will be placed on the signs at water stations.

Some signs indicate stats, such as traffickin­g victims being pimped out as many as 15 to 20 times a day. Others highlight the plight of Indigenous women who constitute about half of all women who are trafficked.

“Nova Scotia is a source province and it’s a real issue here,” said Cheryl Mcleod, Ride For Refuge’s event director in Truro. “It’s just to help get people aware and realize that this is a big problem in Canada and especially Nova Scotia.”

e signs which will span over 10 kilometres around Truro and will be written in a combinatio­n of red and black ink. Each message will raise awareness on an issue that isn’t getting enough attention.

Mcleod said this is the rst year Truro will be participat­ing in Ride For Refuge, a national fundraiser. e event is scheduled for this Saturday, Sept. 29.

Participan­ts have the choice to walk or bike to raise funds for groups that are vulnerable or exploited. For her part, Mcleod said deciding to raise money for human traffickin­g victims was an easy decision.

“ e more we talk about it, the safer and more educated young girls can be so they don’t fall prey to traffickin­g,” she said.

Similar rides are also slated to take place in Halifax and the An- napolis Valley.

Mcleod hopes the event will start a conversati­on and in addition to the signs, a petition will be circulatin­g asking the House of Commons to further enforce Bill C-36, an amendment to the Criminal Code which makes it illegal to purchase sex.

“ ere is a law there but it’s just not enforced as much as we’d like to see,” said Mcleod.

All donations will be going to Trauma Recovery For Exploited Youth, an organizati­on dedicated to helping and housing victims of human traffickin­g.

Truro’s Ride for Refuge opens at the Douglas Street recreation Centre, 40 Douglas St., with registrati­on at 9:30 a.m. and participan­ts set out at 10:30 a.m. A lunch is slated for noon.

Event details are available at rideforref­uge.org.

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