She created her own anti-human trafficking network, Cyprus Stop Trafficking. She was the president of the organization from 2012 until she resigned in 2018.[5][6] She also lobbied the government of Cyprus to stop human trafficking.[7] Her network organized an anti-trafficking conference in Cyprus in 2008 which included speakers from the United States and the EU, as well as representatives of the Police, the House of Representatives, the Attorney General's Office, the Turkish-Cypriot community, several NGOs, and many journalists.[1] She has also helped trafficked women by letting them stay in her home as they prepared to testify in court against those who held them as sex slaves.[1] She has published five books on human trafficking.[4] Additionally, she also founded in Geneva, ACEES (L’Association Contre L’ Exploitation et L’ Esclavage Sexuel).[4]
Personal life
Androula is married to a Portuguese man and has two children. She spends her life between Switzerland and Cyprus.[2]
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