Investigators based in three Coastal counties have been trained on how to curb Child Sex trafficking and other related vices, that are prevalent in the country’s tourism hub.
According to the DCI, close to 100 detectives have been trained by the International Justice Mission (IJM) on how to identify the stages through which children are groomed for sexual exploitation, identifying children prone to sex trafficking and the roles played by the various perpetrators and actors in a trafficking cycle.
The officers drawn from Mombasa, Kilifi and Kwale counties were also taken through the legal framework for Child Sex Trafficking in Kenya as set out in the Counter-Trafficking in Persons Act.
According to one of the facilitators Naomi Gichuki who is an Advocate of the High Court of Kenya and a Legal Consultant, the training was key in preparing the officers to handle the vice that if left unabated, would destroy the future of many children especially at the coast.
“Innocent children are lured by traffickers with offers of food, clothes, affection, friendship and love then after cultivating some level of trust, the traffickers engage them in prostitution away from their friends and family,” said Gichuki.
The officers were also sensitized on how to adequately interview victims without re-traumatizing them, how to handle crime scenes, evidence management, chain of custody and transnational child sex trafficking.