A DEDICATED charity worker who plays a vital role in keeping vulnerable children safe from trafficking and exploitation has been honoured by North Wales’s policing chief.

Sian Humphreys, who works for Barnardo’s as an Independent Child Trafficking Advocate for Wales, has won the Anti-Slavery Champion title in the North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner’s Community Awards.

The fact that almost 40 per cent of all reported cases in Wales come from the north which has the highest number of referrals to child welfare charity Barnardo’s Independent Child Trafficking Advocate service of any police region in Wales and is evidence of her success in raising awareness of the problem.

She was presented with the trophy by Commissioner Arfon Jones at a special ceremony recently when he paid tribute to the crucial work she carries out working in close partnership with the North Wales Police Modern Slavery Team.

They deal with children in danger of being trafficked or who have already been moved in and out of the region and Wales as a whole for reasons including sexual exploitation, forced labour, working on cannabis farms or selling drugs.

Mr Jones said: “North Wales is just one of four forces in the UK with a modern slavery unit and Sian and Barnardo’s are a key part of that and they work closely together to safeguard children.

“The children are those of parents who have been exploited or they have been exploited themselves - the youngest child we have safeguarded was only two.

“Modern slavery is one of the most insidious and damaging crimes and it all too often slips under the radar but its victims are among the most vulnerable in our society which is why I have made it one of my policing priorities.

“In the past year there have been 124 referrals to the ICTA service in Wales and 49 have been from North Wales which shows the scale of the problem here and the importance of Sian’s work.”

Sian, who is not able to disclose exactly where she lives due to the nature of her work, plays a key role in supporting those children to keep them safe and prevent re-trafficking, as well as enabling their voices to be heard so other agencies can provide them with the best possible support.

Her expertise helps prevent trafficked children from going missing by providing support to social workers and foster carers in relation to safety intervention plans.

“Wales in one of the early adopter sites the Home Office selected to provide support to children who are, or are at risk of, being trafficked.

“Child trafficking is the movement of a child for the purpose of exploitation, examples of which includes working in nails bars, kitchens and restaurants for little or no money or forced into criminality such as maintaining cannabis farms.

“There are many more examples in which children are coerced, groomed and forced into exploitation. It does exist in Wales and we are seeing this. I have supported children from Pakistan, Albania, Vietnam and Romania to name a few. I also support many British children, who are trafficked within the UK, so to be clear, children can be trafficked from anywhere for any type of exploitation.”