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latest update: 23-May-2013 22:15:10  
portugal
EU steps up fight against people trafficking
Updated: 29-Jun-2012

Recent proposals by the European Commission for coordinated measures against human trafficking, aim to protect victims and target criminals more effectively.

According to the EC, hundreds of thousands of adults and children were or are modern-day slaves in the EU – coerced into becoming prostitutes, beggars, labourers, domestic servants, or working in other ways for little or no pay.

The Commission is setting priority measures which governments can take together over the next five years to help victims and jail traffickers more effectively. These include:

• helping victims, especially children – developing a cross-border approach so countries can assist each other in tracking and protecting victims; providing clearer information to victims about their EU rights

• more prevention, less demand – funding research to better understand the economics of trafficking and provide solutions; establishing a pan-European business coalition against human trafficking

• catching and prosecuting traffickers – establishing specialised national investigation units to conduct more joint investigations with EU agencies such as Europol

• more coordination and cooperation – within the EU, with international organisations and with other countries, creating EU-wide networks for NGOs and others working to protect victims here and abroad

• responding effectively to emerging trends – developing an EU-wide system for sharing information and supporting research on Internet and social networks used to recruit victims.

Next steps

The new proposals will be considered by the European Parliament and EU governments. They complement an EU law  adopted last year that establishes common standards on prosecuting traffickers and protecting victims. EU countries have until April 2013 to incorporate the rules into their national laws.

The Commission will report every two years on the progress EU countries make on fighting human trafficking, with the first scheduled for 2014.

Source: European Commission






 
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