G7 Research Group G7 Information Centre
Summits |  Meetings |  Publications |  Research |  Search |  Home |  About the G7 Research Group
 
University of Toronto

Call to Action for Collaboration to Prevent and Counter the Exploitation of Social Media for Migrant Smuggling

Ottawa, November 23, 2025

We, the G7 Ministers of Interior and Security, reaffirm our commitment to prevent and counter migrant smuggling. We will continue to cooperate through the G7 Coalition to Prevent and Counter the Smuggling of Migrants; we will continue to implement the 2024 G7 Action Plan to Prevent and Counter the Smuggling of Migrants; and we will advance the commitments Leaders made at the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, Canada, on June 17, 2025. These commitments include working collaboratively with social media companies to disrupt organized crime groups from using online platforms to advertise, coordinate, and facilitate migrant smuggling operations.

Migrant smuggling is a complex transnational crime that exposes smuggled persons to grave and life-threatening risks, undermines the sovereign right of states to manage their borders, and has links to other serious criminal offences like money laundering, trafficking in persons and drug trafficking.

Internet-enabled services, including social media platforms, are used by criminal networks at every step in the migrant smuggling process – from advertising irregular migration, recruiting low-level associates, facilitating encrypted communication and coordination from afar, all the way to making available online repositories of falsified documents for profit. These operations are often enabled by informal and unregulated financial transfer systems to facilitate illicit payments.

We acknowledge certain strides that social media companies are making to safeguard their platforms from criminal activity. We recognize the ongoing need for strengthened collaboration among governments and the technology industry to prevent and counter the smuggling of migrants.

We invite social media companies to deepen our collaboration to address the use of online platforms by transnational criminal networks to smuggle migrants, including through the development of voluntary principles. Voluntary principles will provide a concrete framework to collaboratively enhance collective tools and capacities to prevent and counter migrant smuggling, reducing the deceptive use of their services by migrant smuggling networks.

We are committed to a multistakeholder approach that leverages expertise and experience, building on existing initiatives, such as the Global Alliance to Counter Migrant Smuggling, and drawing on lessons learned to ensure sustained progress while respecting domestic legal frameworks and our respective international human rights commitments.

[back to top]

Source: Official website of Canada's G7 presidency


G7 Information Centre

Top of Page
This Information System is provided by the University of Toronto Libraries and the G7 Research Group at the University of Toronto.
Please send comments to: g7@utoronto.ca
This page was last updated November 24, 2025.
X      Facebook      Instagram      LinkedIn

All contents copyright © 2026. University of Toronto unless otherwise stated. All rights reserved.