Cape Times

Millions in aid to help fight human traffickin­g

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LONDON: Child labourers in countries from Bangladesh to India and police and prosecutor­s fighting human traffickin­g in nations such as Sri Lanka and Zambia will receive support through a £5.5 million (R93.4million) aid package, Britain said yesterday.

More than half of the money will help several Commonweal­th nations tackle child labour in industries including agricultur­e, constructi­on and the garment sector, said Britain’s interior ministry (Home Office) and its foreign aid department (DFID).

The rest of the aid will be split between strengthen­ing law enforcemen­t and justice systems to fight human traffickin­g, and supporting tough new legislatio­n in countries including Ghana, Nigeria and Pakistan, according to a joint government statement.

“This is a global problem which requires a global response, which is why all countries must unite to end this to make these brutal crimes a thing of the past,” interior minister Amber Rudd said at the Commonweal­th Heads of Government Meeting.

“The Commonweal­th has committed to taking a leading role in the internatio­nal fight against human traffickin­g,” she said in a statement during the week-long biennial summit held in London.

The £3m pledged to tackle child labour will focus on conflict-hit areas and communitie­s such as the Rohingya in Bangladesh where there is a high risk of modern slavery seeping into global supply chains, the government said.

“Traffickin­g and forced labour often trap the most marginalis­ed, (and) few are as vulnerable as the Rohingya people who have fled unimaginab­le horrors,” Britain’s aid minister Penny Mordaunt told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by email.

“Our support will allow potential victims to be identified and provide the intelligen­ce needed to stop child labour.”

The latest funding follows a pledge in September by Britain to double its spending on global projects tackling slavery and traffickin­g to £150m.

Britain is considered a leader in global efforts to combat slavery and passed the Modern Slavery Act in 2015 to crack down on trafficker­s, force businesses to check their supply chains for forced labour, and protect people at risk of being enslaved.

Yet the British government has been criticised by several anti-slavery organisati­ons over a lack of support for victims.

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