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That 25% rise in victims comes after the number of victims shot up 47% between 2019 and 2022.
“As conflicts, climate-induced disasters and global crises exacerbate vulnerabilities worldwide, we are seeing a resurgence of detected victims of human trafficking,” UNODC Executive Director Ghada Waly said in a statement.
Among children, female victims rose 38% from 2019 to 2022. Child trafficking is increasingly seen in areas where unaccompanied children and children who have been separated from a parent are traveling alone.
Child trafficking, the report found, was happening more in high-income countries, particularly among girls.
“Criminals are increasingly trafficking people into forced labour, including to coerce them into running sophisticated online scams and cyberfraud, while women and girls face the risk of sexual exploitation and gender-based violence,” Waly said.
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Globally, women and girls made up just over 3 in 5 victims.
Few nationalities were off limits to traffickers, with victims reported in 162 of the 195 total countries in the world. Of the 195 countries, 128 nations were destinations for people being trafficked against their will.
African citizens were the most trafficked demographic and made up 31% of all cross-border trafficked people. Africans were primarily smuggled across the border but remained on the continent as opposed to being moved to Europe or South America.
Human trafficking up 25% globally as demand for young girls fuels growth