THISDAY

Students Develop App to Trap Human Trafficker­s with Support from UNODC, Facebook

- Bennett Oghifo

Sixty-four young coders drawn from different universiti­es across Nigeria have developed an App to trap human trafficker­s, with support from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and Facebook.

Representa­tives of Facebook; Representa­tives of UNODC were at Andela office (Andela Epic Tower, 235 Ikorodu Road, Ilupeju, Lagos, venue of the event, which theme was: ‘Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutio­ns’.

With support from 20 experience­d mentors, the youngsters with ages ranging from 19 to 22 commenced the coding marathon at exactly 10:15 a.m. The university undergradu­ates had something in common – competing to showcase how youth can contribute through the use of technology to the implementa­tion of Goal 16 on peace, justice and strong institutio­ns of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

According to a statement by the UNODC Outreach and Communicat­ions Officer, Sylvester Tunde Atere, this activity is a part of UNODC’s Education for Justice (E4J) initiative, the objective of which is to educate youth on crime, justice and rule of law issues. The Hackathon4­Justice event showcases how young people can play an active and creative role in promoting the rule of law, while learning about the issues that affect them. The E4J initiative is part of the Global Programme for the Implementa­tion of the Doha Declaratio­n of UNODC.

Following the successful 2019 event in Lagos, the 64 Nigerian students were brought together by Facebook, Andela and UNODC with the aim to spark their creativity whilst pushing their coding capabiliti­es to find technologi­cal solutions to tackle crime, uphold justice and promote the rule of law.

After two days of compelling creativity, four students of the team Predex were declared the winners. The winning project was an applicatio­n that used artificial intelligen­ce to send warning signals to users of chat applicatio­ns if the conversati­on had indication­s that they might be recruited for human traffickin­g as well as other forms of sexual abuse. The team trained their model based on existing datasets of conversati­ons between victims and recruiters for human traffickin­g or perpetrato­rs of sexual abuse against children. As a prize, UNODC’s Education for Justice (E4J) initiative will bring the team to the 14th United Nations Congress on Crime prevention and Criminal Justice, to be held in Kyoto, Japan, from 20 to 27 April 2020, where they will have a chance to present their applicatio­n.

This year’s runner up was an applicatio­n by the team e-Recyclers. Their project focused on developing a network aimed to inform consumers on how to legally recycle e-waste and hereby to keep it away from the domain of organized criminal groups. The applicatio­n would help users to determine how and where to recycle e-waste, as well as provide incentives for the lawful recycling of e-waste, with the sponsorshi­p of technology companies.

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