 What about the rising trend on human trafficking and forced migration in Nigeria, especially near those states? The Kline Foundation has underscored the need for communal efforts to fight the scourge, rising from a workshop for community-based women in Benin City. The state capital executive director of the foundation, who was represented by the state coordinator, Blessing O'Roman, says everyone beginning from the home front should have adequate knowledge of the dangers of forced migration in order to nip the situation in the board. O'Roman says women-led organizations need to be equipped with the requisite skills to engage their community through enlightenment. The legal officer of the Kline Foundation, Fihi Obaro, says also condemns the spate of human trafficking in those states calling for stricter measures to be put in place. We're training the different set of persons so that they can have this information carried out and then also take it down to their own community. That is the basis of this training, not to just be trained and sit down on top of the information. No, take this training to your communities, to your markets, women, group leaders, wherever you know these clusters are. Take this information there, let everybody that is out there know the dangers of human trafficking and then together we can bring it to a stop. A lot of persons want a better life, a lot of people want social amenities, a lot of people do not have societal values that are there and it also has increased human trafficking in Nigeria. Yeah, so we found out that in those states, it depending on the family and depending on the motif, that human trafficking has been increasing. And so it is evident that the dangers of human trafficking are told to individuals, are told to families, knowledge is being spread about it and that also economically, even victims of survivors of trafficking are being empowered. This is about the fifth workshop they have put in place, both at the community level and also at the state headquarter level to ensure that women led organizations, women groups because it is 80% or 90% of people who are affected are women. So they have tried to build the capacity of female-headed NGOs, female-led NGOs and female-based community organizations to ensure that at their community level, where they are based, they become more sensitive, they become more aware of the issues of trafficking.