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ALTP – Project to support the fight against human trafficking in Gulf of Guinea countries (TEH)

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Objective

The ALTP project is supporting the authorities and civil society in 6 Gulf of Guinea countries in various aspects of the fight against human trafficking: strengthening of institutional and operational capacities, law enforcement, protection of victims and regional cooperation.
  • €18m
    BUDGET
  • 48 months
    DURATION

The ALTP Project aims to support the authorities and civil society in six Gulf of Guinea countries (Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea, Nigeria and Togo) in the fight against human trafficking. Indeed, this region is marked by cross-border and circular trafficking patterns: these countries are at the same time territories of origin, transit and destination for victims of trafficking.

Furthermore, it is estimated that 75% of migratory movements in West Africa occur within the region. In the geographical area of operation, there are several major intra-regional corridors involving migratory flows (regular or irregular) and cases of abusive practices, mainly for the purpose of sexual exploitation or forced labour. Human trafficking in this region has both an internal dimension and transnational dimension.
 

What is human trafficking?

Human trafficking refers to the fact of recruiting, transporting, transferring, harbouring or receiving a person by using force, constraint, deception or other means, in order to exploit them (sexual exploitation, forced labour, etc.). It is a serious violation of human rights and human dignity. Trafficking in persons is also one of the most lucrative forms of organised crime, on the initiative of now globalised networks.

The main issues

 • Continue the significant progress seen in the past few years at the political and institutional levels, including the ratification of relevant international legal instruments, the preparation of binding national normative frameworks and specific strategies and action plans, the establishment of national and subregional coordination and cooperation frameworks, and the adoption of measures to protect and assist victims.

 • Support civil society organisations in their actions for victims (prevention, protection, reintegration / rehabilitation). 

Address the considerable structural challenges, the substantial needs in terms of available and suitable material and human resources, the requirement for good coordination between institutions and civil society, the necessity to meet all the needs (social and legal in particular) of victims, the need to strengthen prevention and the dissemination of specialised information, etc.

 • Continue efforts to build the capacities of the relevant actors in combating trafficking.

Main objectives & planned actions


1. Institutional and operational consolidation and preventive actions


Objective: increase the legitimacy, leadership and operational capacities of interministerial bodies for the fight against human trafficking (and their territorial bodies) through structural and organisational support and the implementation of targeted preventive actions  

Examples of the planned actions:

 • Operational and technical support to the national institutions responsible for the fight against trafficking;

 • Support for national multisectoral communication and community mobilisation campaigns, working in particular with diaspora organisations;

 • Development of pools of national experts;

 • Creation / consolidation of toll-free hotlines to report and assist victims;

 • Strengthening of data collection systems, etc.

 

2. Law enforcement


Objective: build the capacities of actors of the penal chain for the fight against human trafficking

Examples of the planned actions:

 • Diagnostics on the functioning of the penal chain in terms of the fight against trafficking at national level;

 • Creation / strengthening of functional and permanent offices for the fight against trafficking in Ministries of Justice;

 • Setting up / strengthening of institutionalised initial and continuing training programmes, including modules on the protection of victims who are minors and the conducting of financial investigations concerning the fight against trafficking;

 • Material and technical strengthening of specialised police units and immigration services, etc.

 

3. Protection of victims 


Objective: strengthen, qualitatively and quantitatively, the specialised services and common law services available to victims of trafficking.

Examples of the planned actions:

 • Support for the implementation / strengthening of national mechanisms for the compensation of victims;

 • Support for integrated national systems to refer victims to effective and appropriate assistance services;

 • Strengthening of certain governmental / non-governmental rehabilitation centres for victims of trafficking;

 • Development of grant programmes for NGOs with relevant projects for the reintegration of victims of trafficking and prevention, etc.

 

4. Regional cooperation  


Objective: boost cross-border cooperation and implement cooperation measures in accordance with the existing bilateral and regional agreements, in partnership with ECOWAS.

Examples of the planned actions:

 • Operationalisation of cooperation protocols for information sharing under existing bilateral agreements;

 • Strengthening of regional networks of professional actors from civil society, etc.

Methodology


The ALTP project takes up the methodology and thematic areas of a previous French cooperation project (Priority Solidarity Fund to support the fight against human trafficking in the Gulf of Guinea) conducted in the region between 2013 and 2017 (Benin, Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria and Togo). It aims to ensure the sustainability of the achievements of the initial phase and develop new targeted actions that have impacts.

Based on the institutional dialogue initiated back in 2016 with the authorities of the targeted countries, the project promotes:

 • A holistic approach, combining the prevention, suppression, victim support and coordination components;  

 • An inclusive approach, involving all the key institutional actors and civil society and promoting an ongoing dialogue and an effective coordination of actions;   

 • The integration and consultation, as far as possible, of beneficiary communities;

 • A multi-country approach addressing specific national issues;

 • The integration of a regional dimension by operationalising bilateral and regional cooperation mechanisms, via forums and feedback from experience, and through a strengthened partnership with ECOWAS, in close coordination with existing initiatives.

News of the ALTP Project


Planning workshops to ensure project ownership

Workshops were organised in November 2019 to plan the activities in Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana with the authorities concerned and the relevant civil society actors. These workshops will be replicated in Guinea in December and Togo, Benin and Nigeria in early 2020. The objective is to adapt the activities to the context as much as possible and come up with an inclusive project work plan for 2019-2023.

Read the full article

 

Find out more on the European Commission website