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“Twenty Convicted Human Traffickers Removed From Canada”

By Obrempong Nana Yaw Baafi
Diaspora (Canada) Twenty Convicted Human Traffickers Removed From Canada
JUL 30, 2014 LISTEN

TWENTY members of a human trafficking criminal organization that had operated in the Hamilton area have been removed or deported from Canada. The individuals were all part of the extended Domotor-Kolompar Criminal ring and were convicted of human trafficking charges under the criminal code of Canada.

This was announced by the minister of public safety and emergency preparedness, Honourable Steven Blaney and posted on the website of Canada Border Services Agency [CBSA] on July 22, 2014.

Of the twenty persons removed, the CBSA publically made known the following nine removed members as Csazar Kristina, Domotor Ferenc Jr, Domotor Gizella and Domotor Jozsef.

The rest were Karadi Ferenc, Kolompar Attila, Kolompar Gizella, Papai Gyozo and Szato Janos.

According to the minister, the Domotor-Kolompar extended family were recruited and/or transported from their country Hungary, with promises of a better life and work in the Hamilton area.

'They were forced to work illegally, live in deplorable conditions without adequate food, and were intimidated and attacked repeatedly' the minister stated.

He disclosed that the most recent removals were completed in May 2014 when Gyozo Papai and Gizella Domotor were removed to Hungary.


The CBSA made it public that presently, 22 members of the criminal organization have been convicted of crimes relating to human trafficking and it has removed 20 of those individuals from Canada, the minister disclosed.

In June 2012, the government of Canada launched the National Action Plan to combat Human Trafficking which introduced aggressive new initiatives to prevent human trafficking, identify victims, protect the most vulnerable, and prosecute perpetrators, in addition to consolidating its ongoing efforts to combat human trafficking.

As part of its enforcement of the immigration and protection act, the CBSA may remove from Canada any person who has been issued with a removal or deportation order for bleaching the act. Human trafficking, often described as a modern day form of slavery, involves the recruitment, transportation, harbouring and/or exercising control, direction or influence over movement of a person in order to exploit that person, typically through sexual exploitation or force labour.

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