How human traffickers use 'corridors' to isolate victims, evade police - Action News
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Nova Scotia

How human traffickers use 'corridors' to isolate victims, evade police

A new report is giving advocates a clearer picture of how human traffickers use transportation routes across Canada to evade police and isolate their victims.

New report looks at well-known corridor between Halifax and Moncton

A new report by the Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking details how human traffickers use transportation corridors on a regular basis to exploit victims, who are often young women and girls. (Robert Short/CBC)

For the first time, advocates have a better understanding of how human traffickers use transportation routes across the country, including between Halifax and Moncton, N.B., to evade police and confuse and isolate their victims.

A national study released Monday by the Canadian Centre to End Human Traffickingdetails how trafficking corridors between cities are being used to exploit young women and girls. Many areforced to workas escorts or in strip clubs.

Sara-Lynne Lantz, a trauma counsellor with the Colchester Sexual Assault Centre in Truro, N.S., has worked with survivors of human trafficking who've been moved as far away asToronto.

"They were terrified. They didn't even think they were going to actually get out alive they didn't even really know which city they were in at that point," Lantz said.

"To even try to just get out and get a bus, you can't even do that when you don't have any money or debit card or anything like that, so it's incredibly scary."

Sara-Lynne Lantz is a trauma counsellor and client intake supervisor at the Colchester Sexual Assault Centre in Truro. (Colchester Sexual Assault Centre)

The report's findings don't surprise her advocates have known anecdotally for many years that the Trans-Canada highway between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick is a major human trafficking corridor.

But according to the centre, this is the first study of its kind to collect data from police and service providerstobetter understand how these corridors areused.

The studyfound that in some cases traffickers rent multiple cars along their routes using fake IDsso it's harder for police to track them.

"One of the things that, you know, took me aback is really how prevalent this is and how it's happening in all communities, big and small anywhere where there's access to the internet and a highway," said Julia Drydyk, executive director of the Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking.

The Halifax-Monctoncorridor

The stretch of the Trans-Canada Highway between Halifax and Moncton was the most frequently mentioned corridor in Atlantic Canada, according to the report.

Researchersfound that traffickers go to Moncton to access the commercial sex markets in strip clubs, for example,or to recruityoung women andlure themback to Halifax. Victims can also be taken to larger centres such as Montreal and Toronto.

Truro is considered a hub for human trafficking due to its location between Halifax and Moncton and rates of poverty, addictionand lack of affordable housing, said the executive director of the Colchester Sexual Assault Centre.

"Unfortunately,Truro is uniquely positioned to be one of those key areas that trafficking and exploitation takes places," Jamie Matthews said.

Traffickers usecorridorsfor three main reasons, the report found to make money,to evade detectionby moving across jurisdictionsand to keep victims isolated.

Margaret Mauger, the co-founder of the After Trauma Empowerment Network, said she worked with one survivorwho had been moved all over Canada.

Margaret Mauger is a certified trauma counselling therapist. (Robert Short/CBC)

Moving victimson a regular basis allowstraffickers to exert further control overthem,Mauger said. She added that while victims are often young women and girls, she's also worked with young menand transgender people who've been exploited.

"They live in fear of trying to access help," she said. "Not being in a community long enough to even know what supports or resources might be available tothem, and there's very few resources in our country to assist people that are looking to exit trafficking and exploitation."

Survivors face stigma

In 2020, six women and girlswho hadexperiencedsome form of human trafficking reached out to the Colchester Sexual Assault Centre, a quarter of the centre's caseloadat the time.

The stigma of human trafficking can last even when survivors escape exploitation, Lantz said.

In small communities like Truro, it can be hard for people exiting human traffickingto be accepted, and someend up returning to harmful situations in order to support themselves, she said.

Lantz said helping survivors requires a host of supports, from counselling, to dental, to removing tattoos that are used by traffickers to identify victims.

The new data about corridors will be a helpful tool toeducate young people about how traffickers operate, she said.

"We have a really clear national evidence look at these maps for how easily they can move you and why they move you from city to city to city to city across provinces. I think it's really, really important," Lantz said.

More police co-operation needed

One of the recommendations in the report by the Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking is to createmore law enforcement teams that can work across borders and jurisdictions.

"We also need to make sure that law enforcement are trained in every jurisdiction across Canada to be able to identify and apply trauma-informed responses to human trafficking," Drydyk said.

It's really important that Canadians understand that this is a Canadian issue.- Julia Drydyk, Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking

She said some people still believe that human trafficking is a problem in other countries or that it doesn't affect Canadians.

"It's really important that Canadians understand that this is a Canadian issue," she said, "that it'slargely Canadian women and girls being exploited and that this is happening in folks' backyards, but it's also happening on those mainstream transportation routes that as Canadians, we use all of the time."

Where to go for help

In January, theElizabeth Fry Society in Truro created the Gate Outreach line. It's staffed by a team from the organization until1 a.m.most days and can be reached at 1-833-625-GATE or gate.efry@gmail.com.

People can also contact the Colchester Sexual Assault Centre on Facebook or at902-897-4366.

TheAfter Trauma Empowerment Network can be reached at902-758-3967.