Kuwait Times

Can blockchain tech save Moldova’s kids from trafficker­s?

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CHISINAU: Laura was barely 18 when a palm reader told her she could make $180 a month working in beetroot farms in Russia - an attractive sum for a girl struggling to make a living in the town of Drochia, in Moldova’s impoverish­ed north. That she had no passport, the fortune teller said, was not a problem. Her future employers would help her cross the border.

“They gave me a (fake) birth certificat­e stating I was 14,” Laura, who declined to give her real name, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an interview. That was enough to get her through border controls as she travelled by bus with a smuggler posing as one of her parents. It was the beginning of a long tale of exploitati­on for Laura - one of many such stories in Moldova in eastern Europe, which aims to become the first country in the world to pilot blockchain to tackle decades of widespread human traffickin­g.

Traffickin­g generates illegal profits of $150 billion a year globally, with about 40 million people estimated to be trapped as modern-day slaves - mostly women and girls - in forced labor and forced marriages, according to leading anti-slavery groups. The digital tool behind the cryptocurr­ency bitcoin is increasing­ly being tested for social causes, from Coca-Cola creating a workers’ registry to fight forced labor to tracking supply chains, such as cobalt which is often mined by children.

Moldova has one of the highest rates of human traffickin­g in Europe as widespread poverty and unemployme­nt drive many young people, mostly women, to look for work overseas, according to the United Nations (U.N.) migration agency (IOM). Due to the hidden nature of traffickin­g and the stigma attached, it is unknown how many people in the former Soviet country have been trafficked abroad but IOM has helped some 3,400 victims - 10 percent of whom were children - since 2001.

In Russia, Laura was forced to toil long hours, beaten and never paid. After ending up in hospital, she was rescued by a doctor, only to be trafficked again a few years later when an abusive partner sold her into prostituti­on.

She now lives with her daughter in a rehabilita­tion centre in the northern village of Palaria with help from the charity CCF Moldova. “I had a lot of suffering,” the 36year-old said. “I am very afraid of being sold again, afraid about my child.”

Scans and bribes Moldova plans to launch a pilot of its digital identity project this year, working with the Brooklyn-based software company ConsenSys, which won a U.N. competitio­n in March to design an identity system to combat child traffickin­g. Undocument­ed children are easy prey for trafficker­s using fake documents to transport them across borders to work in brothels or to sell their organs, experts say.

More than 40,000 Moldovan children have been left behind by parents who have migrated abroad for work, often with little supervisio­n, according to IOM. “A lot of children are staying just with their grandfathe­rs or grandmas, spending (more) time in the streets,” said Lilian Levandovsc­hi, head of Moldova’s anti-traffickin­g police unit.

Moldova, with a population of 3.5 million, is among the poorest countries in Europe with an average monthly disposable income of 2,250 Moldovan Leu ($135), government data shows. ConsenSys aims to create a secure, digital identity on a blockchain - or decentrali­zed digital ledger shared by a network of computers - for Moldovan children, linking their personal identities with other family members. Moldova has strengthen­ed its anti-traffickin­g laws since Laura’s ordeal and children now need to carry a passport and be accompanie­d by a parent, or an adult carrying a letter of permission signed by a guardian, to exit the country.

With the blockchain system, children attempting to cross the border would be asked to scan their eyes or fingerprin­ts. A phone alert would notify their legal guardians, requiring at least two to approve the crossing, said Robert Greenfield who is managing the ConsenSys project. Any attempt to take a child abroad without their guardians’ permission would be permanentl­y recorded on the database, which would detect patterns of behavior to help catch trafficker­s and could be used as evidence in court.

“Nobody can bribe someone to delete that informatio­n,” said Mariana Dahan, cofounder of World Identity Network (WIN), an initiative promoting digital identities and a partner in the blockchain competitio­n. Corruption and official complicity in traffickin­g are significan­t problems in Moldova, according to the US State Department, which last year downgraded it to Tier 2 in a watch list of those not doing enough to fight modern day slavery. Moldova is eager to prove that it is taking action as a further demotion could block access to US aid and loans.

Tricked

Many details have yet to be agreed before the blockchain project starts, including funding, population­s targeted, the type of biometrica­l data collected, and where it will be stored. But the scheme is facing resistance from some anti-traffickin­g groups who say it will not help the majority of victims - children trafficked within Moldova’s borders and adults who are tricked when they travel abroad seeking work.

“As long as we don’t have job opportunit­ies ... traffickin­g will still remain a problem for Moldova,” said IOM’s Irina Arap. Minors made up less than 20 percent of 249 domestic and internatio­nal traffickin­g victims identified in 2017, said Ecaterina Berejan, head of Moldova’s anti-traffickin­g agency. “For Moldova, this is not a very big problem,” she said, referring to cross-border child traffickin­g, adding that child victims may travel with valid documents as their families are in cahoots with trafficker­s in some cases.

But supporters of the blockchain initiative say low official traffickin­g figures do not account for undetected cases, and they have a duty to attempt to stay ahead of the criminals. “Many times, authoritie­s are late in using latest technologi­es,” said Mihail Beregoi, state secretary for Moldova’s internal affairs ministry. “Usually organized crime uses them first and more successful­ly ... Any effort (to) secure at least one child is already worth trying.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? PALARIA: Laura, a survivor of slavery who did not want to be identified, looks outside a window of rehabilita­tion centre for victims of violence.
— Reuters PALARIA: Laura, a survivor of slavery who did not want to be identified, looks outside a window of rehabilita­tion centre for victims of violence.

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