Times of Suriname

National TIP action plan unveiled

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In the next two years there will be an increase in the crackdown on Traffickin­g in Persons (TIP). This notion was enhanced with the launch of the National Plan of Action for the Prevention and Response to TIP at the Guyana Police Force (GPF)’s Training College Thursday . With the action plan, the government intends to spend $22.4M on the prevention, protection and prosecutio­n of persons in 2017 and 2018. Coordinato­r of the CounterTra­fficking Unit, Tanisha Williams-Corbin projected that there will be an increase in the number of arrests, charges and conviction­s of alleged TIP perpetrato­rs by 300 percent. She added that based on statistics; there is an increase in the number of reported cases reaching authoritie­s, which means that the number of identified victims is on the increase. With the launch of the TIP Action Plan, training will be provided for 20 police officers, 15 magistrate­s and attorneys, 10 immigratio­n officers in TIP processing at ports, and 10 officers of the Guyana Geology and Mines Commission. Additional­ly, 50 civil society representa­tives will be trained in identifyin­g and reporting TIP, while five manufactur­ing companies would be asked to include educationa­l messages and contact informatio­n for the TIP hotline on their product labels. A Victims’ Rights handbook would also be published by the end of March this year, which can be used by all stakeholde­rs. The media understand­s that surveillan­ce and surprise visits will be conducted on businesses and individual­s across Guyana, and from intelligen­ce gathering, raids will be carried out on suspicious locations.

The National Plan of Action includes the monitoring of operations of bars, clubs, nightspots, cinemas, massage rooms, modeling/art agencies, interior checkpoint­s, mining camps, hotels and other businesses. President David Granger told the gathering that government’s efforts to tackle TIP include the provision of a shelter and psych-social services to victims. He indicated that wardens would be deployed to go after TIP perpetrato­rs and victims. “We have this year started the establishm­ent of a corps of wardens and these wardens would be going into mining and logging settlement­s and along border areas where traffickin­g has been prevalent.”

(Kaieteurne­ws.com)

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