Yes. Thank you, Madam Chair, for this opportunity to appear before the committee today.
I'm privileged to speak to you about the International Organization for Migration's concerns about human trafficking.
Trafficking is a coercive and exploitative process related not only to migration but also to gender, labour, human rights, and security issues.
Today, I'd like to highlight some of IOM's programmatic responses to human trafficking and share with you some of what we've learned through providing direct assistance to victims and how we can improve on meeting victims' needs worldwide.
Within our work as an intergovernmental international organization, the IOM promotes orderly and humane migration for the benefit of all migrants, working closely with governmental, intergovernmental, and NGO partners to respond to diverse needs of migrant populations worldwide.
IOM has a membership of 118 states, including Canada. Our organizational structure is highly decentralized and service oriented, with 280 field locations around the world. IOM's extensive geographical presence, along with the directive to assist governments in migration management and to ensure the safety and well-being of migrants, puts us in a unique position to also advise on policy and provide assistance to victims of human trafficking through the IOM network worldwide.
For over a decade, IOM has collaborated with partners to develop a comprehensive victim-centred response. We aim to strengthen the tools and resources available to organizations providing direct services to victims and to law enforcement in the conviction of traffickers.
It's estimated that at least one million men, women, and children are trafficked across international borders and forced into involuntary servitude. Many more people are trafficked within their own countries, in and out of local communities, generating huge profits for criminals operating in many parts of the world in relative impunity.
It's against this backdrop that the IOM is currently carrying out more than 150 counter-trafficking projects in some 70 countries of origin, transit, and destination. To date, IOM has provided direct assistance to over 100,000 persons. IOM is able to carry out counter-trafficking activities only through the financial support we receive from governments and other donors. Currently, the highest portion of funding for IOM's global counter-trafficking activities comes from U.S. government agencies, followed by Sweden, the EU, and Australia. In the past five years, IOM has received approximately $488,000 from the Canadian government. That has allowed IOM to carry out counter-trafficking activities with local partners in 11 countries and regions.
As a reflection of Canada’s own response to the growing challenges of addressing human trafficking within its borders, law enforcement training activities have been conducted with IOM participation involving Canadian immigration officers, border officials, police, prosecutors, and policy advisers within government agencies to build capacity and techniques for investigating and prosecuting trafficking cases.
Last year, an IOM representative from Costa Rica presented some of the successful community-level practices to combat human trafficking at an event hosted by the Canadian Red Cross and the Canadian Council for Refugees, together with other concerned individuals and organizations in British Columbia, to shed more light on the problem.
These are examples of federal, provincial, and local efforts to mobilize civil society to work together to gain a common understanding and to better define each actor's role in a coordinated response.
In IOM's experience, such collaboration is necessary if the problem is going to be addressed comprehensively.
The capacity of individuals and institutions is crucial in developing a response and long-term strategy that will address human trafficking in a sustainable manner. Ongoing training and information exchange is necessary.
Despite good efforts to bring attention to the issue, human trafficking remains one of the most serious challenges to migration policy makers and practitioners worldwide.
When a person falls prey to a trafficker, the consequences for the individual are extremely serious. Victims often do not know where to go for assistance and may be too scared to seek help. Sometimes victims who do escape traffickers are re-victimized by authorities who deport them due to their irregular migratory status, rather than granting victims the protection they deserve.
Staff of IOM and local partnering agencies know firsthand the heartbreak and suffering inflicted on victims of trafficking, individuals whose hopes for a good job or for safety from persecution or violence have been shattered. It's heart-wrenching to think about the people enslaved who we have not reached. Globally, the needs of trafficking victims greatly outnumber the resources available to help. This provides even greater reason for organizations to share experiences, as human trafficking remains an ever-changing phenomenon.
In recent years, IOM has made efforts to document and share its experience on the ground working in real-life settings. For example, through the financial support of the U. S. Department of State's Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, IOM has developed counter-trafficking training modules to provide an introduction to essential components of counter-trafficking activities, including information campaigns, cooperation and networking, return and reintegration, and capacity building. The next three topics under development are direct assistance, children, and victim identification and interviewing techniques. This interrelated series of educational materials has been designed to be easily modified to allow for different contexts; thus, government, non-governmental organizations, and donors have quick and cost-effective access to training on activities related to counter-trafficking through IOM.
Another example is IOM's internal “Direct Assistance Handbook”, which will soon be available in an adapted version for external partners, and our counter-trafficking module database, the only global database with information from primary sources. It's widely used by governments, law enforcement agencies, NGOs, and others as an important source of data.
Certainly, other actors in the fight against human trafficking may have equally effective strategies and approaches. What’s important is sharing what we have learned from common experiences. The IOM finds that a well-established process for the return and reintegration of victims of trafficking lies at the heart of building a comprehensive counter-trafficking response. This process inherently involves constant contact with a victim; therefore, it's critical that service delivery organizations are identified and their capacity strengthened to ensure the safety and protection of the victim while maintaining a humane approach to care.
Based on our experience, we encourage institutions to adopt basic principles that guide direct assistance, including a respect for human rights of all assisted victims; a victim's informed consent; the right to privacy; and self-determination and voluntary participation, especially in regard to returning victims to their origin country or community.
Providing services in an environment that safeguards dignity and fosters both a sense of well-being and trust between the victim and the service provider can also facilitate information exchange that might lead to the apprehension and punishment of traffickers and others who are complicit in the trafficking situation. Most importantly, proper handling of victims of trafficking in the return and reintegration process leads to successful recovery of the victims and reintegration into society. It also greatly diminishes the chance of re-trafficking.
As an example, the IOM office in Washington, D.C., runs a unique program that assists foreign national victims of trafficking who are identified in the United States. The IOM's return, reintegration, and family reunification program facilitates voluntary return and reintegration of victims of trafficking, enabling their safe return home. The program also reunites victims who have been granted T visas and permission to remain in the U.S. with their immediate family members.
The victims have been men, women, and children forced to work as domestic servants, prostitutes, skilled labourers, and in the agriculture and restaurant sectors. To date, 48 persons from 15 countries have been returned home or reunited with family members. Many of those who have been returned to their family members are children who have not seen their parent in years. We are currently assisting an additional 50 individuals.
Regardless of the level of socio-economic development, many states are continually striving to enhance their capacity to effectively manage population movements, including finding acceptable counter-trafficking mechanisms.
IOM believes that this political commitment, together with support from agencies such as IOM and others, is the most effective way to combat trafficking and put an end to the exploitation of its victims.
Madam Chair, thank you for having me appear before you today.