AEROLÍNEAS

U.N. agency urges mandatory training to combat human trafficking on flights

Airlines should offer mandatory training to prevent human trafficking, the United Nation"™ aviation agency said in a new document that could further empower cabin crew on the front lines of global efforts to combat such trafficking.

Civil aviation authorities should "require" carriers to teach staff to identify and respond to trafficking, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) said in new training guidelines for cabin crew co-published on Monday with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Montreal-based ICAO cannot impose rules on governments, but wields clout in civil aviation through standards that are followed by its 192-member countries.

While the United States already requires mandatory training for flight attendants, it was not known whether other countries that don"™t have similar rules would follow suit.

Combating human trafficking, estimated as the world"™s second most profitable trans-national crime according to the document, has emerged as a growing concern for global aviation. Airline trade group International Air Transport Association is eying ways to strengthen the training efforts its members are already doing "which should be announced later this year," an IATA spokeswoman said.

"It (airline involvement) is starting to spread," said Martin Maurino, safety, efficiency and operations officer with ICAO"™s air navigation bureau. However, training programs offered by airlines like Emirates [EMIRA.UL] and budget carrier AirAsia are done voluntarily.

Canada"™s Sky Regional is the first airline globally to train its pilots and flight attendants using the new UN guidelines on the identification and response to trafficking, Maurino and the carrier"™s in-flight director, Mikaela Dontu, said…

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