Labour, Police, OSH officers engaged in advanced training to spot TIP

The Human Services and Social Security Ministry, in collaboration with the Labour Ministry, has embarked on three days of advanced training of law enforcement, labour, and occupational safety and health (OSH) officers on combating Trafficking in Persons (TIP).

Participants at the opening session of the advanced training course to recognise instances of human trafficking. The course is being held at the Police Officers Training Centre, Eve Leary (DPI photo)

The course is being held at the Police Officers’ Training Centre at Eve Leary, the Department of Public Information has reported.
Coordinator of the Counter-Trafficking in Persons (C-TIP) Unit, Tanisha Williams- Corbin, has said the initiative is in keeping with Guyana’s collaboration with the United States’ (US) State Department on reducing the incidence of this crime.
“Over the next three days, participants will be exposed to various aspects of the uniqueness of TIP in Guyana. The advance training course serves as a follow-up (to) the basic-level course held in January 2019. All participants…here today have successfully completed the previous course,” she is quoted by DPI as saying.
The course is designed to boost the capacity of frontline officers, particularly labour officers, to identify trafficking. It will also provide practical experience in identifying and screening victims of human trafficking, Williams-Corbin added.
Chief Labour Officer Charles Ogle has said collaboration between Ministries and Government agencies is necessary to curb this crime.
“Inspectors must be equipped with the technical skills to ensure they can identify where the traffickers are located, so that those persons involved can be prosecuted,” Ogle said.
He pointed out that human trafficking is not just a violation of the rights of victims; it is a crime against humanity, and must be eliminated at all costs.
Since 2017, Guyana and The Bahamas have ranked Tier 1 in the US State Department’s TIP Report.
This does not mean that the countries have no incidents of human trafficking, but that they fully meet the minimum standards to eliminate TIP, in keeping with the US Trafficking Victims Protection Act.