These schemes of human trafficking reflect the many facets of committing the crime in the pretext of legal and normal ways of facilitating the commission, which can be described as pernicious, preying as it does on the most vulnerable women, children, the poor and least educated. It can be said that human trafficking is a consequence of social factors that confront the national, regional and international communities. These social factors include but not limited to poverty, unemployment, poor education, gender inequality, human crises and proliferation of illegal recruiters which breed gross exploitation and abuses of human rights.