DAR ES SALAAM, Oct 14 (NNN-GNA) — Kenya and Tanzania have agreed to strengthen border security through cooperation to weed out transboundary crime, including human and drug trafficking, terrorism and poaching.
Tanzania’s President Samia Suluhu and Kenya’s President William Ruto made the announcement at a press briefing in Dar es Salaam following bilateral talks.
“We have agreed to enhance the cooperation that exists between our security agencies so that we can share information, strategies, and be able to deal with these challenges to secure our countries and region,” Samia Suluhu said.
Ruto said, “We have agreed to fight crime, human trafficking, drug trafficking, and the rest of the transboundary crimes that are making our region uncompetitive and giving us a bad name.”
He added that cooperation between Kenyan and Tanzanian security agencies will enable the countries to deal with crime “to secure our two countries and ensure that we reduce on the negative effects of unsecure boundaries.”
Human trafficking has been a menace and has tarnished the two countries’ image globally, said Samia Suluhu, adding that they are working to curb the crime across Kenyan and Tanzanian borders.
“In fact, those trafficked are not Tanzanians. We simply arrest them. But when they arrive here, records show they are from Tanzania and Kenya,” she said.
The borders have become a pathway for traffickers to smuggle people, including children, to other African countries and sometimes onward to other continents.
Most of the victims are trafficked for domestic work and other informal business sector jobs, mainly in the Middle East and Asia. Many others are forced into prostitution.
In 2019, Never Again Rwanda, an NGO, said Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania served as destinations for trafficking in the region, especially for victims from Burundi, DR Congo and Rwanda. However, the countries are also transit points to other destinations in the Middle East, Asia and southern Africa.
The ease of travel across border posts in East Africa contributes to the flow of trafficking.
The report, titled ‘Understanding Human Trafficking in Rwanda: Causes, Effects, and Impact’, indicated that the increased number of human trafficking rescues made in Rwanda over the past five years can be attributed to increased knowledge of the crime of human trafficking.
Earlier this year, the UK partnered with Tanzania to take measures to curb child trafficking and abuse.
Tanzania had been rated among countries in eastern and southern Africa with high cases of child trafficking and GBV, affecting mostly girls from poor families in rural areas.
In September, Tanzania approved amendments to the local anti-human trafficking laws to include tougher penalties such as lifetime jail terms and fines of up to Tsh200 million ($86,000) to curb the crime.
In Kenya, cases of human trafficking have caused alarm after many victims suffered at the hands of employers and traffickers, with many not making it home alive. In many cases, the victims were subjected to slavery.
Last month, the story of an emaciated Diana Chepkemoi, who was ailing and held against her will in Saudi Arabia, sparked a public uproar in Kenya. Several agencies and the government worked to ensure her return to Kenya.
In the same month, Kenyan authorities warned against applying for online jobs in South East Asian countries after it emerged hundreds of East Africans are falling victim to trafficking.
This followed the rescue of 22 Kenyans, a Burundian and a Ugandan who had been trafficked to Laos, lured with lucrative job offers.