G7 Pledges United Front Against Transnational Crime, Targets Drug Trade and Cyber Threats

November 24, 2025
G7 Pledges United Front Against Transnational Crime, Targets Drug Trade and Cyber Threats
  • Officials aim to deepen cross-border collaboration to disrupt the lucrative drug trade and improve information exchange as part of broader efforts to combat transnational crime.

  • Ministers pledge to undermine the profits of global crime networks and strengthen cooperative efforts across borders.

  • Discussion covered migrant smuggling, intimidation of diaspora communities by authoritarian states, online counter-terrorism and violent extremist content, cybercrime, and internet-related child sexual exploitation and abuse.

  • Ministers reaffirm efforts to detect and disrupt illegal synthetic drugs such as fentanyl, alongside addressing migrant smuggling and diaspora intimidation, online terrorism content, cybercrime, and online child sexual abuse.

  • The G7 debate framed broader security challenges as including migrant smuggling, diaspora intimidation, online terrorist content, cybercrime, and online child exploitation.

  • Public Safety Minister highlighted a convergence of transnational crime with terrorism, cyberattacks, and migrant exploitation, calling for holistic, cross-agency coordination to connect the dots across enforcement lines.

  • He reiterated the need for cross-cutting collaboration to link efforts across different agencies in confronting integrated threats.

  • EU officials emphasized international data and information sharing to combat sophisticated, globally connected criminal networks, with a focus on drug trafficking.

  • Europe noted Canada’s approaches as a source of lessons for addressing evolving criminal networks.

  • The EU underscored that Canadian strategies offer valuable insights as criminal networks grow more sophisticated and transnational.

  • A 'follow-the-money' strategy was highlighted to target migrant smuggling through financial intelligence and information sharing, including sanctions and travel measures against facilitators.

  • Ministers supported voluntary industry efforts to curb extremist content online, boost digital literacy, and prevent radicalization, urging tech companies to accelerate prevention tools and remove material facilitating child exploitation.

  • A joint statement stressed that transnational criminal organizations are ruthless, and defeating them requires global cooperation and innovative approaches informed by counterterrorism and cybersecurity lessons.

  • The G7 interior and security ministers comprise Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the European Union, presenting a broad coalition against transnational crime.

  • Canada and other G7 members commit to aggressively disrupting transnational organized crime during a two-day Ottawa meeting.

  • Overall, global security officials emphasized enhanced international cooperation and information sharing to counter sophisticated, globally connected crime networks.

Summary based on 4 sources


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