Stabroek News

Still much more to be done to fight human traffickin­g

-Ramjattan

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Despite Guyana retaining the Tier 1 ranking for its efforts towards combating Traffickin­g in Persons (TIP), Public Security Minister Khemraj Ramjattan yesterday said recommenda­tions to address shortcomin­gs from the recently released US State Department 2018 Report will not go unnoticed since much more needs to be done.

“At this point, it was recognized that this did not mean that Guyana had conquered the crime of TIP by any stretch of the imaginatio­n; rather, each anti-TIP agent in Guyana was urged to treat the promotion as motivation to maintain a high level of effort and efficiency in their work in areas where success was achieved and to strive for improvemen­t where necessary,” Ramjattan told reporters yesterday while delivering a statement in response to the report.

He explained that while the Ministry is satisfied in maintainin­g the Tier 1 ranking, the recommenda­tions in the report did not go unnoticed.

“In some of the mentioned areas, such as those pertaining to training, identifica­tion procedures and victim services outside the capital, improvemen­t has already started. In others, such as with regard to an increase in the rate of conviction, there is much more to be done,” Ramjattan noted.

Khemraj He said in the previous installmen­t of the TIP report, Guyana had been elevated to Tier 1 for the first time. “I am happy today to say that these agents would have listened to this charge and that their efforts were recognized in the US State Department’s TIP report through Guyana’s continued placement on Tier 1,” Ramjattan said. He added that having overseen the work of the Task Force last year, its members along with other antiTIP stakeholde­rs had worked diligently to assemble a 2017-2018 National TIP Action Plan and begin its implementa­tion.

The combined efforts, Ramjattan said, have resulted in an increase in attempts to prevent the crime and to protect those victimized through it.

The undertakin­gs included the provision of training for police investigat­ors, police prosecutor­s and immigratio­n officers, media personnel, community policing members, toshaos, village councillor­s and other frontline officials.

Awareness sessions were also held in schools and communitie­s throughout the various regions, he said.

Additional­ly, subvention­s to shelters were increased and a shelter was extended outside the capital, Ramjattan noted, while adding the collaborat­ions were commenced with internatio­nal organisati­ons that will eventually see to it that current procedures and informatio­n sharing mechanisms are strengthen­ed and that training is standardis­ed.

“The police on the other hand has also strived meaningful­ly to investigat­e TIP Reports, despite challenges. The Government of Guyana sustained its efforts to ensure that antiTIP interventi­ons were well funded, primarily through the Task Force, the Ministry of Social Protection, Guyana Police Force and Guyana Geology and Mines Commission,” he added.

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Ramjattan

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