Moor Links February/March 2021 issue

Page 10

FEATURE

Modern slavery on our doorstep It’s easy to think that slavery is a thing of the past but, sadly nothing could be further from the truth. Centuries after slavery was officially abolished, thousands of people are still being exploited and sold as slaves from Asia to Australia and Europe to the Americas - even here in the UK right on our own doorsteps. In fact, without realising you probably see people trapped in slavery on a regular basis. It might be someone working in a private home on your street, the man working in the car wash in town, or the cleaner who empties your office bin every night. It can be difficult to spot the signs. Modern slavery in the UK can take many forms, including forced sexual exploitation, domestic slavery or forced labour on farms, in construction, shops, bars, nail bars, car washes or manufacturing. The number of people identified as victims of modern slavery has been rising year on year. According to the Global Slavery Index it is thought there are up to 136,000 victims of modern slavery in the UK.

So how do people get trapped in slavery? According to the world’s oldest international human rights organisation, British based Anti-Slavery International, vulnerable people often take big risks in order to provide for their families. Typically, they can be offered an apparently good job in the UK. Often they take a loan from the traffickers in advance. However, when they arrive in the UK, the situation is completely different. Their passport might be taken away and they’re told they need to pay off the debt before they can leave. Violence and threats are common. They are trapped here with no possessions, no means to return and totally reliant on their traffickers. Vulnerable British people are also targeted,

especially children from disadvantaged backgrounds, to be groomed into drug criminal gangs in so-called ‘county lines’ trafficking. A prime example of how slavery can exist in plain sight is the case of the Rooney family who ran a slave ring right under the noses of a UK town in Lincolnshire. By taking advantage of vulnerable populations such as the homeless, the elderly, and the mentally ill, the Rooney family slave ring managed to run under the radar for over two decades, netting the family a huge profit while sending their victims through unspeakable injustices. In all, 11 Rooney family members ended up in prison. These horrific crimes have even inspired recent episodes of Radio 4’s The Archers which has helped to raise awareness of the evil pervasiveness of modern slavery. For the police, modern slavery and human trafficking is a challenging crime to investigate. The complexity of cases, the variety of crimes, the multi-national and multi-ethnic background of participants, the multiple occurrences of abuse, the different forms of deception and coercion used to control victims and the way offences are interwoven with other forms of criminality, sets modern slavery apart. This led to the Modern Slavery Police Transformation Programme being set up in 2017 to help support and train the police in how best to tackle this problem and share intelligence both regionally and nationally. In fact, Devon & Cornwall’s Chief Constable Shaun Sawyer is the police lead for the Modern Slavery and Organised Immigration Crime Unit, based in Exmouth. Last year they unveiled new figures showing that despite Covid, investigations into modern slavery-related offences were at their highest ever level. More than 2,000 cases were live in September alone.

Image by Pexels via Pixabay

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