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The Alberta government introduced a new bill Tuesday that it says will empower survivors of human trafficking.

The government said trafficking takes three forms: sexual exploitation, forced labour and organs or tissues.

According to the province, if the Protecting Survivors of Human Trafficking Act, or Bill 8, is passed, it will:

expand the definition of sexual exploitation to include people of all ages

make it easier for survivors to get protection orders

enable police to take faster action to rescue survivors

allow survivors to sue traffickers

create an awareness day on Feb. 22

With 12 Alberta cases among the 228 reported human trafficking incidents in Canada in 2018, Premier Jason Kenney said the province has to be a leader in this fight.

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“Too often, Albertans think that human trafficking is something that happens at the remote corners of the developing world. The truth is it happens in our own communities, and sometimes it happens as close as the business or house next door,” he said in a press release.

Today we introduced a bill to take action on human trafficking. Human trafficking isn’t some problem that’s far removed in another corner of the world – it happens here in Alberta, and it has to stop. That’s why we will be a leader in this fight.https://t.co/UZ2wPF38mY pic.twitter.com/2H2VH23UPk — Jason Kenney (@jkenney) April 7, 2020

Justice Minister Doug Schweitzer — who introduced the bill — echoed Kenney’s remarks, saying the province has to lead the way to protect survivors.

“Survivors rely on a patchwork of existing remedies and statutory protections, and too many fall between the cracks in our system,” he said.

“We are strengthening a survivor’s ability to get away from this physically, emotionally and financially damaging abuse.” Tweet This

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READ MORE: United Conservative Party unveils plan to fight human trafficking in Alberta

Kate Quinn, executive director of CEASE: Centre to End All Sexual Exploitation, said this legislation would make a difference in the lives of many.

“An awareness day, emergency protection orders and the ability to sue traffickers can help those who have suffered,” she said.

“We work closely with law enforcement and community partners to support those who are in immediate danger from their traffickers, and it is abundantly clear that we need to do more to create much-needed protection at critical stages.”