Manitoba

Hotline to report human trafficking in Canada in the works

A Canadian organization that is combating human trafficking is working on establishing a national hotline to report cases in this country.

Hotline an 'important piece in combating human trafficking,' says organization

A young woman cowering in fear.
Experts on human trafficking say women and girls are being moved between North Dakota and Manitoba, but there is no data to back that up. (Shutterstock)

Women and girls are being trafficked for sex across the U.S.-Canada border.

"We know that the incidents of human trafficking in Manitoba and North Dakota are very high," said Barbara Gosse, CEO of the Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking.

Gosse is one of the organizers of a cross-border meeting in Winnipeg on Friday that brought together 50 people form Manitoba and North Dakota to discuss ways to combat human trafficking.

"Anecdotally we know that law enforcement members and front-line service providers are connecting with victims every single day," said Gosse. "In Canada, we have no national data mechanism to track that data."

There is a national hotline to report human trafficking in the United States, and Gosse said her organization is working to establish one in Canada.

Jillian Taylor spoke with Barbara Gosse, CEO, The Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking on cross border human trafficking.

8 years ago
Duration 2:57
Winnipeg has become ground zero in the battle against human trafficking between Canada and the United States.

In the U.S., the hotline is run by the Polaris Project. On Friday, the organization said in eight years, the hotline received 660 calls from Canada, 113 of which reported confirmed cases of human trafficking. Five were from Manitoba.

"[The hotline] is an important piece in combating human trafficking and supporting victims as well," said Gosse. 

In North Dakota, sex trafficking became more evident with the oil boom in the Bakken oilfield.

Christina Sambor, director of the North Dakota Human Trafficking Task Force, said while entrepreneurs and people looking for work in the oil field rushed in, so did exploiters.

"You see traffickers who also see that market and respond by bringing women into North Dakota," said Sambor.

"What we saw in building a response to that [Bakken boom], we started to uncover markets or networks that have been there for a long time," she added.

Sambor said it is crucial to establish response networks with her neighbours to the north, and she's learned from the conference that Manitoba front-line workers are taking similar approaches in dealing with the issue.

"I think the more you partner across the border, the more you can start comparing — 'This is what we're seeing, this is what we've heard' — and start to evaluate that," she said.

Gosse said the Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking plans to hold similar networking sessions between other provinces and their neighbouring states.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jillian Taylor is the Executive Producer of News at CBC Manitoba. She started reporting in 2007 and spent more than a decade in the field before moving behind the scenes. Jillian's journalism career has focused on covering issues facing Indigenous people, specifically missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. She is a born-and-raised Manitoban and a member of the Fisher River Cree Nation.