The MoU is expected to be signed soon after the approval.
Ministry of Home Affairs believes the MoU will strengthen the bonds of friendship between the two countries and increase the bilateral cooperation on the issues of prevention, rescue, recovery and repatriation related to human trafficking especially women and children expeditiously.
The following are the salient features of the MoU:
(i) To strengthen cooperation to prevent all forms of human trafficking, especially that of women and children and ensure speedy investigation and prosecution of traffickers and organized crime syndicates in either country.
(ii) Taking preventive measures that would eliminate human trafficking in women and children and in protecting the rights of victims of trafficking.
(iii) Anti-trafficking Cells and Task Forces will work on both sides to prevent human trafficking.
(iv) Police and other concerned authorities will work in close cooperation and exchange information which can be used to interdict human traffickers.
(v) The repatriation of victims would be done as expeditiously as possible and the home country will undertake the safe and effective re-integration of the victims.
(vi) A Joint Task Force with representatives from both sides would be constituted to monitor the working of the MoU.
Clarifying the situation, the Ministry of Home Affairs said that as a destination of trafficking, South Asian countries are mainly affected by domestic trafficking, or trafficking from the neighbouring countries. South Asian victims are also increasingly detected in the Middle East.
India is a source and transit country as far as trafficking to UAE is concerned, whereas UAE is a destination and transit country for men and women, predominantly from South, South-east and Central Asia and Eastern Europe, who are subjected to forced labour and sex trafficking.
Migrant workers, who comprise over 95 per cent of the UAE's private sector workforce, are recruited primarily from Ethiopia, Eritrea, Iran and East, South and South-east Asia. Some of these workers face forced labour in the UAE. Women from some of these countries travel willingly to the UAE to work as domestic workers, secretaries, beauticians and hotel cleaners, but some are subjected to forced labour by unlawful withholding of their passports, restrictions on movement, non-payment of wages, threats and physical or sexual abuse.
Ministry of Home Affairs also highlighted that the reinforcement of anti-trafficking efforts at all levels between the UAE and India is essential for prevention and protection of victims. This requires mutual cooperation among both the countries for intelligence sharing, joint investigation and a coordinated response to the challenges of human trafficking. For this purpose, it is proposed to sign a Memorandum of Understanding with UAE.
India has already signed one MoU to prevent trafficking with Bangladesh while the MoU with Bahrain is to be signed later in April, according to the ministry.