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Thursday April 25, 2024

Slaves are in your street, your town!

By AFP
November 16, 2017

LONDON: From upmarket British and US neighbourhoods to slums in India, people are trapped in slavery in every country with greater efforts needed to free them and rebuild their lives, campaigners said ahead of a conference on Wednesday.

An estimated 40 million people were enslaved globally last year, in both rich and poor countries, with modern slavery becoming a catch-all term to describe human trafficking, forced labour, debt bondage, sex trafficking, and forced marriage.

But with the UN’s latest global goals calling for the end of forced labour, modern slavery and human trafficking by 2030, campaigners said it was time everyone stepped up to end this escalating crime worth an estimated $150 billion a year.

Jessica Graham, victim services director at US-based non-profit Survivor’s Ink - that helps women branded by sex traffickers get decorative tattoos to cover their marks - said people were too often choosing not to see what was before them.

"There is this common misconception that this is only happening in poor countries and poor neighbourhoods," said Graham ahead of the Thomson Reuters Foundation’s annual two-day Trust Conference where one day focuses on slavery. "But many of these girls come from wealthy backgrounds. This is happening everywhere but people keep it quiet and choose not to see it."

Up to 60,000 people are believed to be living as slaves in the United States, according to the 2016 Global Slavery Index. Graham said she knew nothing of trafficking until four years ago when she discovered her estranged husband trafficked women for s.x - and then found out her great-grandmother sold her grandmother for s.x which was why her father was adopted.

Her husband, whom she left 12 years ago taking their two small children after he turned abusive, sold his next girlfriend - with whom he also had a child. Six months ago that girlfriend, Jennifer Kempton, who founded Survivor’s Ink after six years in sex slavery in Ohio, died of an accidental drug overdose.

"Sadly I’ve seen too many survivors unable to have a normal life because they have a past that haunts them every day. They need help," said Graham, calling for more assistance for victims to find jobs, housing and rebuild their lives.