26/01/2026
CCCPA concluded its training titled “Precarious Journeys: Enhancing the Understanding of Mobility Patterns in Africa” that took place between 18-22 January 2026. The training was organized with the support of the Government of the Kingdom of the Netherlands Ministerie van Asiel en Migratie.
The training brought together 31 national officials and front-line officers from ministries of Foreign Affairs, Interior, Defense, Justice, Social Affairs, Gender, Women and Children as well as representatives from the National Committees on Migration and the Coast Guard Units from Egypt, Burkina Faso, Djibouti, Chad, Ghana, Mali, Morocco, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Sudan, and Yemen.
Over the five days, the sessions analyzed the different dynamics of migration across Africa, with particular focus on the proliferation of illicit activities by criminal networks exploiting vulnerabilities along major migratory routes. The training focused on strengthening knowledge about the national and reginal legal frameworks to prevent and combat challenges related to migration. In addition, the sessions discussed the investigative capacities, the prosecutorial mechanisms, and cross-border cooperation frameworks that should ensure timely, effective, and rights-compliant judicial outcomes for both victims and perpetrators. Furthermore, the sessions examined structural and operational gaps related to regional judicial/legal cooperation, identifying practical avenues to establish formal and informal coordination mechanisms to accelerate judicial proceedings and enhancing cross-border legal cooperation.
The training underscored the importance of parallel financial investigations and anti-money laundering frameworks as core operational instruments for dismantling organized criminal networks, particularly through the identification, tracing, confiscation of illicit financial flows and assets recovery.
The training features the participation of a wide range of national and international experts and facilitators, including representatives from the Egyptian National Coordinating Committee on Preventing Illegal Migration and Trafficking in Persons, the Egyptian Ministry of Justice, and the Egyptian General Prosecution Office. In addition, the sessions featured the participation of the International Organization for Migration IOM EGYPT.