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Home Latest News

Southern African countries join hands in addressing smuggling of migrants

byCT Report
13/05/2016
in Latest News, South Africa
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JOHANNESBURG:  Southern African Development Community (SADC) member states are joining hands in addressing the growing challenge of smuggling of migrants in the SADC region, the SADC Secretariat said on Friday.

A two-day meeting to this effect was held in Johannesburg on May 11-12, with the participation of officials representing the immigration authorities, police, prosecutors and ministries of justice in the 11 SADC countries, said Maemo Machethe of the SADC Secretariat.

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The workshop, the first of this kind, was organized by SADC Secretariat and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime to discuss the smuggling of migrant’s trends and patterns in the Region, and share ideas of possible regional response to this challenge.

The workshop has provided a much-need platform to fill in some information gaps around smuggling of migrants in the SADC Region and enable SADC member states to jointly map a way forward in addressing this challenge in line with the requirements of the United Nations Protocol against smuggling of migrants by Land, sea and air, said Machethe.

Despite the existing regulations of legal migration systems, people in the SADC region move continuously for a range of reasons – to seek employment, to escape poverty, to reunite with their families, to flee internal conflict. However, the difficulty in accessing legal channels for migration often forces individuals to rely on the services of smugglers to reach their destination, according to the SADC Secretariat.

Migrant smuggling generate large profits for the criminals involved – whether they are migrant smugglers or traffickers in the form of agents or employers. Both are low-risk and high-profit crimes, the Secretariat said.

The participants of the workshop voiced particular concern on the increased trend of unaccompanied minors smuggled into the region and the exposure of women and children to sexual abuse during smuggling, Machethe said.

While South Africa was identified as the main destination in the Region for smuggled migrants, the criminal justice practitioners agreed that due to the scope and implications of illegal migration not a single country can deal with it alone.

Smuggling of migrants became a security challenge in the region as it undermines the states’ ability to protect national borders and puts the lives and safety of migrants at risk while generating enormous profits for criminals, fuelling corruption and organized crime, said Machethe.

The SADC has developed a draft Regional Strategy to Combat Illegal Migration, Smuggling of Migrants and Trafficking in Persons in order to operationalize the regional 10-year Strategy to combat trafficking in persons, especially women and children.

The SADC has also put in place the SADC Anti-Corruption Committee in line with its Protocol against Corruption in order to strengthen measures against amongst others alleged corrupt officials working at borders.

However, despite these regional cooperation initiatives the number of criminal cases against smugglers critically low.

The criminal justice practitioners acknowledged lack of a specific national legislations and cross-border cooperation that would enable the effective criminal justice response to this issue.

In the absence of a specific law on smuggling of migrants, it is difficult to apprehend smugglers, participants at the meeting said.

SADC member countries only have immigration laws which are quite lenient and deal only with illegal entry, illegal stay, and illegal exit from the country, ending up only apprehending the smuggled migrants, and not the criminal networks behind the smuggling, it was learned at the meeting.

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