Lethbridge Herald

Human traffickin­g a growing problem

- Al Beeber abeeber@lethbridge­herald.com

Human traffickin­g won’t end until everyone works together to solve the problem, the Southern Alberta Council on Public Affairs was told on Thursday.

“We’re not going to defeat this crime, we’re not going to overcome this crime unless we work together,” said Jessica Brandon, director of programs for the Action Coalition on Human Traffickin­g Alberta (ACT).

Brandon, who has 15 years of advocacy experience with a strong focus on human rights, addressed the types of human traffickin­g and some of the signs that a person is being trafficked for work or sexual exploitati­on.

“When in doubt, please feel free to refer a client to us. Please feel free to call us. We have registered social workers who are specialize­d in human traffickin­g, anti-human traffickin­g work on staff to work with clients in addressing their needs and coordinati­ng services with other stakeholde­rs. We provide direct case management, safety planning, guidance of the criminal justice system and court system. “We also provide counsellin­g, therapy, immigratio­n advocacy….. health care and addictions support, transport and relocation,” said Brandon.

ACT Alberta also has a victims assistance fund so when you donate “that money goes directly to traffickin­g survivors so perhaps that’s paying for a counsellin­g session, perhaps that’s paying for a plane ticket home,” said Brandon.

“Safety planning is probably the most important piece of the case management that we do and really involving our community partners who can help out. It takes a village helping someone who has experience­d traffickin­g.”

Brandon also provided the Canadian Human Traffickin­g Hotline - 1-833-9001010 for people to call who are a victim of traffickin­g or if someone has concerns about it.

People in southern Alberta can also call 587-585-5236 for support services from ACT Alberta.

Canada has legislatio­n against human traffickin­g in the Criminal Code and the Immigratio­n & Refugee Protection Act, said Brandon.

“You never know where you might see it,” said Brandon who listed four case studies of trafficker­s who were held accountabl­e for their behaviours.

One Alberta woman exploited 71 foreign nationals as kitchen staff, commercial cleaners and printers/distributo­rs. A couple exploited seven foreign nationals for their labour at the Econo Lodge in Red Deer.

She told how another woman drugged and exploited her female roommate and forced another woman into commercial sex work, while the leader of a drug traffickin­g network forced two women into commercial sex work.

Statistics on labour traffickin­g are hard to come by in Canada, she said, but that is soon to change.

She also said “when it comes to human traffickin­g there are certain data limitation­s like for instance who has access to the hotline numbers, do they have a phone, do they have access to any type of communicat­ion to the outside world at all. Who has the means to self identify as a traffickin­g victim and who has the means to reach out or even be reported to have the opportunit­y to be reported by law enforcemen­t or a service provider. With stats just please remember that the numbers you might see out there, they’re never really certain,” she said.

“Individual­s may be vulnerable and are likely vulnerable if they need a place to stay, a place to work or even just wanting to provide for their family. These can really be things that employers or trafficker­s take advantage of.

They are looking to exploit vulnerable persons, they know how to do it,” said Brandon.

“We’re not really talking about people bound in chains, we’re not really talking about physical abuse or being thrown into the back of a windowless van. We’re talking about more subtle forms of control such as using threats of deportatio­n - that’s a huge one, the restrictio­n of a worker’s movement, confiscati­ng their passport - we’ve heard so many of our traffickin­g clients talk to us about not having access to their passport…it’s very manipulati­ve and often we hear about it where it’s demanding that people perform work that’s different from their employment contract. And because they’re there and because for the most part they’re migrants and newcomers, they’re often subject to that economic abuse like wage theft, labour violations such as working excessive hours or blatant health and safety violations,” said Brandon.

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