Wednesday, October 31, 2012

In Class Activity

International trafficking cases fell 13 per cent to 3,531 in 2011, down from 4,066 in 2008. But domestic cases shot up 140 per cent from 713 in 2008 to 1,708 last year. The fall in international cases may reflect more efficient immigration and border controls, while the increase in the number of domestic cases may reflect greater public awareness of trafficking and improved domestic law enforcement, according to IOM Head of Counter Trafficking Laurence Hart.


1Paraphrase:      There has been a decrease in international cases of human trafficking.
2Summary:    Factors such as better border control and immigration policy have led to a decrease in cases of human trafficking.  

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