Government Provides ¢1m Support To Combat Human Trafficking
Government has released ¢1 million to the Human Trafficking Fund to help combat the menace in the country.
Cynthia Maamle Morrison, the Gender Minister said her outfit has over the past three and half years organised community sensitization and dialogues to create awareness on human trafficking and irregular migration.
Addressing journalists at the ‘Meet-the-Press’ series in Accra on Wednesday, she said the Ministry had held durbars in traditional areas where 75 traditional leaders pledged their support to combat the menace.
Ghana has rescued, supported, and given care to 611 human trafficking victims since 2019, out of which 200 were children and 411 adults.
Government had also provided shelter for victims of human trafficking and facilitated processes for a reunion with their families.
Human trafficking is an act of recruitment, transportation, trading or receipt of a person within and across national borders for the purposes of exploitation.
Ghana is on Tier Two of the Human Trafficking Rankings. Tier Two countries are those whose governments do not fully comply with the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) 2000 minimum standards but are making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance with those standards.
On support to the poor and vulnerable, Mrs Morrison announced that a total of 1,451,656 extremely poor households were registered on the Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) programme and GH¢ 334,084.00 five cycles of cash grants had been paid to them.
In addition, 73 percent of the LEAP beneficiaries were registered onto the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), with 5,522 individuals linked to productive socio-economic activities.