S/RES/2388 (2017)
analyse financial intelligence, as well as by reinforcing regional and international
operational law enforcement cooperation;
7.
Calls upon Member States to strengthen compliance with international
Anti-Money Laundering/Combatting the Financing of Terrorism standards and
increase capacity to conduct proactive financial investigations to track and disrupt
human trafficking and identify potential linkages with terrorism financing;
8.
Urges Member States, while addressing trafficking in persons in areas
affected by armed conflicts, to adopt a multi-dimensional approach that includes
incorporating information on the risks of trafficking in persons into school curricula
and training programs;
9.
Encourages Member States to increase efforts to collect, analyse and
share through appropriate channels and arrangements and consistent with
international and domestic law data relating to financial flows associated with
human trafficking and the extent and nature of financing of terror ism activities
through human trafficking activities, and to provide, where applicable, Counter Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate (CTED) and the Analytical Support and
Sanctions Monitoring Team with relevant information pertaining to linkages
between human trafficking and terrorist financing;
10. Reiterates its condemnation of all acts of trafficking, particularly the sale
or trade in persons undertaken by the “Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant” (ISIL,
also known as Da’esh), including of Yazidis and other persons belonging to
religious and ethnic minorities, and of any such trafficking in persons crimes and
other violations and abuses committed by Boko Haram, Al-Shabaab, the Lord’s
Resistance Army, and other terrorist or armed groups for the purpo se of sexual
slavery, sexual exploitation, and forced labour, and underscores the importance of
collecting and preserving evidence relating to such acts in order to ensure that those
responsible can be held accountable;
11. Requests the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team, when
consulting with Member States, to continue including in their discussions the issue
of trafficking in persons in areas of armed conflict and the use of sexual violence in
armed conflict as it relates to ISIL (also known as Da’esh), Al-Qaida and associated
individuals, groups, undertakings and entities and to report to the Security Council
Committee established pursuant to resolutions 1267 (1999), 1989 (2011), 2253
(2015) and 2368 (2017) on these discussions as appropriate;
12. Requests the Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate
(CTED), within its existing mandate, under the policy guidance of the Counter Terrorism Committee (CTC), and in close cooperation with UNODC and other
relevant entities, to increase its efforts to include in CTED’s country assessments, as
appropriate, information regarding Member States efforts to address the issue of
trafficking in persons where it is committed for the purpose of supporting terrorism,
including through the financing of or recruitment for the commission of terrorist acts;
13. Calls upon Member States to enhance the capabilities of professionals
interacting with persons forcibly displaced by armed conflict, including refugees,
such as law enforcement, border control officials and criminal justice systems
personnel of refugee and displaced persons reception facilities, to identify victims
or persons vulnerable to trafficking, to adopt gender and age sensitive assistance,
including adequate psychosocial support and health services, regardless of their
participation in criminal investigations and proceedings;
14. Recognizes the need to strengthen the identification, registration,
protection, assistance for forcibly displaced persons, including refugees and
stateless persons, who are victims of trafficking or at risk of being trafficked;
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