PANAPRESS
Panafrican News Agency
Rwanda: US Attorney General highlights need for rule of law
Kigali, Rwanda (PANA) – US Attorney General Loretta Lynch has told delegates at the INTERPOL General Assembly that upholding the rule of law is a government’s foremost responsibility.
Delivering the keynote speech at the international gathering of some 640 police chiefs and senior law enforcement officials, she said INTERPOL "stands as an invaluable conduit for mutual assistance between law enforcement agencies across the world and a critical facilitator for international cooperation in matters of security, opportunity and human rights".
A statement issued by INTERPOL on Wednesday said Ms Lynch, pointing to the issue of human trafficking as one of her highest priorities as Attorney General, stressed that it remained one of the foremost challenges to the international community.
“With its ties to organized crime, its preying on flows of migrants and its complex financing schemes, human trafficking is a truly global problem that demands a truly global response,” said Lynch.
“The international community has come a long way in the last 15 years, but the fact that millions of individuals remain in forced labour reminds us of how far we have to go. We must find ways to work even more closely together in order to end this affront to our values and stop this crime against humanity,” added the Attorney General pointing to the FBI’s annual Operation Cross Country initiative against individuals trafficking children for sexual exploitation which this year resulted in the arrest of hundreds of sex traffickers.
In addition to highlighting INTERPOL’s role at the forefront of the global crusade against human trafficking, Ms Lynch said the world police body’s work involved action against some of the most important and complex law enforcement challenges.
In combating the threat of foreign terrorist fighters, the US Attorney General said INTERPOL’s network to coordinate global counter-terrorism activities was an invaluable resource in stemming the illicit travel of individuals moving to and from conflict zones.
Ms Lynch praised INTERPOL for driving innovation and fuelling advancements to expand
international capabilities to identify crimes and pursue wrongdoers through its global police information systems, round-the-clock support and operational assistance.
She encouraged delegates to continue to play their part in upholding the rule of law and urged all countries to "continue, every day, to pursue our mission of a safer world, to advance our vision of a more just society and to hold close our hope of a brighter future for all".
The General Assembly is INTERPOL’s supreme governing body, which meets once a year.
Discussions at this year’s session in Kigali are addressing some of most pressing cross-border challenges faced by police today, including counter-terrorism and foreign terrorist fighters, the organized criminal groups behind drug trafficking and people smuggling, and the different facets of cyber crime.
-0- PANA MA 4Nov2015
Delivering the keynote speech at the international gathering of some 640 police chiefs and senior law enforcement officials, she said INTERPOL "stands as an invaluable conduit for mutual assistance between law enforcement agencies across the world and a critical facilitator for international cooperation in matters of security, opportunity and human rights".
A statement issued by INTERPOL on Wednesday said Ms Lynch, pointing to the issue of human trafficking as one of her highest priorities as Attorney General, stressed that it remained one of the foremost challenges to the international community.
“With its ties to organized crime, its preying on flows of migrants and its complex financing schemes, human trafficking is a truly global problem that demands a truly global response,” said Lynch.
“The international community has come a long way in the last 15 years, but the fact that millions of individuals remain in forced labour reminds us of how far we have to go. We must find ways to work even more closely together in order to end this affront to our values and stop this crime against humanity,” added the Attorney General pointing to the FBI’s annual Operation Cross Country initiative against individuals trafficking children for sexual exploitation which this year resulted in the arrest of hundreds of sex traffickers.
In addition to highlighting INTERPOL’s role at the forefront of the global crusade against human trafficking, Ms Lynch said the world police body’s work involved action against some of the most important and complex law enforcement challenges.
In combating the threat of foreign terrorist fighters, the US Attorney General said INTERPOL’s network to coordinate global counter-terrorism activities was an invaluable resource in stemming the illicit travel of individuals moving to and from conflict zones.
Ms Lynch praised INTERPOL for driving innovation and fuelling advancements to expand
international capabilities to identify crimes and pursue wrongdoers through its global police information systems, round-the-clock support and operational assistance.
She encouraged delegates to continue to play their part in upholding the rule of law and urged all countries to "continue, every day, to pursue our mission of a safer world, to advance our vision of a more just society and to hold close our hope of a brighter future for all".
The General Assembly is INTERPOL’s supreme governing body, which meets once a year.
Discussions at this year’s session in Kigali are addressing some of most pressing cross-border challenges faced by police today, including counter-terrorism and foreign terrorist fighters, the organized criminal groups behind drug trafficking and people smuggling, and the different facets of cyber crime.
-0- PANA MA 4Nov2015