Border Force join European anti-trafficking operation
13 Jun 2014 11:54 AM
Immigration Enforcement
and NCA officers also join Europol effort to stop trafficking from West
Africa
Officers from Border Force, the
National Crime Agency (NCA), and Home Office Immigration Enforcement have taken
part in a major European operation to tackle human trafficking from West
Africa.
The operation, which took place
on Wednesday 11 June, focused on a number of inbound flights to Heathrow
Airport, a major European transit hub for West African flights, with the aim of
detecting potential victims and gaining intelligence on the organised crime
groups involved in trafficking for the purpose of sexual
exploitation.
As part of the operation Home
Office Immigration Enforcement liaison officers in Lagos and Madrid worked with
local law enforcement agencies to provide extra intelligence and conduct checks
on those travelling to the United Kingdom.
Heathrow
At Heathrow, officers from
Border Force’s specially-trained Safeguarding and Trafficking Team,
working alongside the NCA, carried out additional screening of passengers
including those in transit to other EU nations.
The case of a 16-year-old girl,
identified as a potential victim of trafficking, was referred to social
services, while safeguarding checks were carried out on a number of other
arrivals. Intelligence gathered was fed on to other law enforcement agencies in
the UK and abroad. Additionally three people were prevented from boarding a
flight from Lagos to Heathrow for immigration reasons.
The day of action was
co-ordinated by Europol, with involvement from law enforcement agencies in
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Spain, Sweden,
Ireland, Czech Republic, Ireland, Finland, Switzerland, Norway and Portugal as
well as the UK.
Slavery
Samantha Rigler, head of the
Border Force Heathrow Safeguarding and Trafficking team, said:
The UK is a destination country
for trafficking victims from West Africa but it is also a key transit point for
onward travel to other European destinations.
We regularly conduct these kinds
of operations at Heathrow working with our immigration liaison officers abroad,
but by being part of this Europe-wide day of action we have increased our
impact against the organised crime groups involved in
trafficking.
Those crime groups are often
based outside the UK, so we are working with law enforcement partners at home
and abroad to bring them to justice and prevent people becoming victims of this
appalling crime.
We are determined to send a
message out that the UK will not tolerate any form of modern
slavery.
Similar operations carried out
in the last two weeks by Border Force at Heathrow, supported by Immigration
Enforcement colleagues in Lagos, have led to the identification of five
potential victims of trafficking and one suspected trafficker, all prevented
from boarding flights to the UK. The case of another potential victim
identified at Heathrow was referred for further investigation. Further
intelligence has also been disseminated to numerous other law enforcement
agencies in the UK and abroad.
Trafficking
Liam Vernon, from the
NCA’s UK Human Trafficking Centre, said:
The trafficking of women and
children from West Africa to the UK is a significant problem - victims are
tricked into believing they will work or study in the UK, only to be sold into
a life of sexual slavery by the organised crime gangs behind this vile
trade.
We are determined to prevent
this, to protect and support victims and pursue the criminals making money from
the misery of innocent people. Working in collaboration with other EU countries
is essential and sends a strong message to the traffickers that we are united
in our efforts to tackle modern slavery.
According to provisional
figures, more than 673 persons, mainly women from West African countries, were
checked across the countries involved in the operation. Of those, 111 potential
victims of trafficking (mostly women from Nigeria) were identified. Via
cross-checks at the Europol headquarters, more than 30 persons were found to
have links to criminal structures. As a result of the day of action, new
investigations have been launched in several participating countries with
Europol’s support.
The operation came the same week
as Home Secretary Theresa May published details of a new Modern Slavery Bill.
The Bill is the first of its kind in Europe, and one of the first in the world,
to specifically address slavery and trafficking in the 21st
Century.