UN: Climate change refugees in Bangladesh vulnerable to human trafficking

Human trafficking increased after millions of people were displaced by devastating cyclones and typhoons, according to the Global Report on Human Trafficking 2022.

Human traffickers are most active in the world's largest mangrove forest, the Sundarbans, and coastal areas of the southern Khulna district
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Human traffickers are most active in the world's largest mangrove forest, the Sundarbans, and coastal areas of the southern Khulna district

People displaced by the growing climate disasters in Bangladesh's coastal region are vulnerable to human trafficking, a report has said.

The report, Global Report on Trafficking in Persons 2022, was published on Friday in Dhaka, with officials from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the International Organization for Migration (IOM), and the Bangladesh government in attendance.

Human trafficking has increased in Bangladesh after millions of people were displaced by devastating cyclones and typhoons, providing traffickers an opportunity to organise large recruitment campaigns, the report said.

Human traffickers are most active in the world's largest mangrove forest, the Sundarbans, and coastal areas of the southern Khulna district, according to the report, with 730 cases of human trafficking reported in 2020.

Globally, the number of convictions for trafficking offenses fell by 27 percent in 2020 compared to the previous year, but in Bangladesh, it fell by 56 percent.

The pandemic has increased vulnerabilities to human trafficking, undermining efforts to rescue victims and bring criminals to justice.

During the pandemic, fewer cases of trafficking for sexual exploitation were detected because public spaces were closed, and related restrictions may have pushed this type of trafficking into more concealed and less safe locations, making it more difficult to identify victims.

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Evolving trafficking activities 

Based on trafficking cases detected between 2017 and 2021, the report covers 141 countries and provides an overview of patterns and flows of human trafficking at the global, regional, and national levels.

“While human traffickers are becoming more tech-savvy and are able to use technology successfully to their advantage, technology can also become an enhancing tool for the criminal justice system to detect, investigate and prosecute traffickers,” said Marco Teixeira, the regional representative at UNODC Regional Office for South Asia.

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UN Resident Coordinator in Bangladesh Gwyn Lewis said: “We must redouble our efforts to seriously and effectively address poverty and systemic inequalities with sustainable, inclusive responses. Those we leave behind are those we surrender to traffickers.”

Md. Aminul Islam Khan, senior secretary of Bangladesh's Ministry of Home Affairs, said on the occasion that his government is doing everything possible to combat illegal human trafficking, including strengthening border security and legal drives by security forces.

“The emerging effects of Covid19 and climate change on human trafficking trends and patterns are alarming,” he said, adding that the national and international partners should prioritise "strengthening capacities to identify trafficking in persons and focus on creating a victim-friendly criminal justice system".

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