Showing posts with label Ecpat UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecpat UK. Show all posts

Friday, October 28, 2011

Catherine McKinnell: Marking Anti-Slavery Day 2011

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/catherine-mckinnell/marking-antislavery-day-2_b_1014327.html



Catherine McKinnell


1807 is the date that is commemorated as the year in which Wilberforce's campaign to abolish slavery succeeded, with the passing of The Slave Trade Act 1807. But it was not until 1833 that the Abolition of Slavery Act was passed - Wilberforce died just three days after. His public work and tireless campaigning on this issue of profound importance was done.

Yet - almost 180 years after slavery was abolished - there is one form of trade that is still thriving in austerity Britain: the modern-day slavery that is the trafficking of human beings.

October 18th marks the UK's second Anti-Slavery Day in an attempt to raise awareness of this heinous and hidden crime.

The sheer number of children being brought illegally into the country is deeply concerning. Figures from the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre show an average of 300 children are trafficked into the UK per year. But it is the purposes for which they are brought that cause the most alarm. These include sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, benefit fraud, cannabis farming, street begging, theft and shoplifting. And a recent and sinister BBC report suggested at least 400 African children have been abducted and trafficked to the UK in the last four years, allegedly for witchcraft purposes.

Children identified as victims of trafficking in the UK are taken into local authority care, but as The Observer reported earlier this year, a disturbing number of these children simply go missing - often permanently, with many falling into the clutches of their abusers again.

That's why ECPAT UK has been working alongside The Body Shop (and indeed politicians from all parties) to campaign for the Government to establish a proper system of guardianship for the children who are victims of this appalling crime - delivering a 730,000-strong petition on the issue to Downing Street in May.

A guardian appointed to every victim would ensure that they get the right care, accommodation, education, healthcare and language support, and of particular importance, that the child has access to legal representation. This proposal is backed by the UN, and the UK Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights. It is also a requirement of Article 16 of the new EU Directive on Preventing and Combating Trafficking in Human Beings and Protecting Victims, which the Coalition finally agreed to opt-in to in March.

Sadly, Ministers disagree - repeatedly arguing that Section 11 of the 2004 Children Act gives local authorities a statutory duty to ensure that they safeguard and promote the welfare of all children. Yet, this duty clearly isn't working, and how would Ministers know anyway? The Children's Minister Tim Loughton recently indicated in answer to a parliamentary question that the Government has no records of how many child trafficking victims are currently in care, or how many may have gone missing.

A proper system of guardianship would also help to increase the dismally low prosecution rate for trafficking offences against children - providing victims with the support they need through the prosecution process. But, the Attorney General - responsible for the CPS - made it quite clear in the Commons recently that the matter was outside of his remit. More worryingly, the CPS appears unable to track its own progress on the issue as it has admitted it 'has no records to identify how many prosecutions and convictions there have been of cases involving allegations of trafficking children'.

Despite the Government's attempts to take human trafficking seriously, all of this displays a worrying lack of joined-up thinking on the issue. What better way for Ministers to demonstrate they really are serious about tackling this growing problem - and indeed to mark Anti-Slavery Day 2011 - than to agree to establish a proper system of guardianship for child trafficking victims? It would not only change the lives of those vulnerable children, but also ensure that Wilberforce can rest in peace.

Follow Catherine McKinnell on Twitter: www.twitter.com/catmckinnellmp
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Monday, October 17, 2011

The business of slavery - Public Service

Source: PS Public Service.CO.UK

17 October 2011

Christine Beddoe
Christine Beddoe highlights the training needed to address some of the difficulties for public sector agencies in tackling child trafficking and abuse – particularly relevant in light of the potential increase resulting from opportunities presented by the Olympics 2012

October 18th is UK Anti-Slavery Day. Far from being something that reflects the history books Anti-Slavery Day was incorporated into law in 2010 by a Private Members Bill put forward by Anthony Steen, former Member of Parliament for Totnes, to remind us that slavery continues to exist in the UK today in the form of human trafficking. The Anti-Slavery Day Act 2010 specifically recognises children and it is truly shocking that one in four people referred to the government's 'National Referral Mechanism' (NRM) for victims of trafficking is under 18 years of age .

In the two years to March 2011, police and local authorities referred 390 children to the NRM. 186 children were referred because of concerns around labour exploitation, including domestic servitude; 115 were referred because of sexual exploitation and 89 were referred with the primary exploitation type unknown. 47 nationalities in total were noted and the top 3 countries of origin for children were Vietnam (107); Nigeria (48) and China (45). A staggering 85 % of all these children were under 15 years of age at the time they were found. However these figures represent the tip of the iceberg as not all children are identified and not all get referred because agencies simply don't know of the NRM. The NRM is simply a Home Office administrative process and doesn't automatically guarantee the child will be kept safe and be protected.

There is no comprehensive reporting framework on the numbers of children trafficked to the UK and being looked after by local authorities. Subsequently there is no single agency responsible for mapping outcomes for this group of highly vulnerable and traumatised children, most of whom will have missed out on basic education as a result of being sold and abused, over and over again.

Children are trafficked to the UK, within the UK and out of the UK for a range of purposes including sexual exploitation, labour exploitation, domestic servitude, forced criminal activity such as cannabis growing and pickpocketing, and benefit fraud. The commonality across all these children is that they will have suffered abuse and neglect, often multiple forms of physical and sexual abuse, over a sustained period of time. Child trafficking is a child protection issue of the highest order. It is not, as some officials often frame it, an immigration issue – it is child abuse requiring complex child abuse investigations and it has significant implications for those who are responsible for the care and welfare of children and young people.

Children who are trafficked are often moved from place to place, moving between local authority and police boundaries. Significantly there are very few, less than 5, convictions for child trafficking, using the UK's human trafficking legislation. The UK has no specialist child trafficking police investigation unit. Even London's Metropolitan Police "The Met" does not have a single specialist unit for the investigation of child trafficking, although various teams including the Met's "Paladin Team" deal with child trafficking from time to time as part of their general workload. The lack of one single focal point makes it difficult for other agencies, such as health, education, children's social services and voluntary sector agencies to pool information, receive quality advice and importantly get access to justice for children who are often both victim and vulnerable witness.

The impact of not getting immediate specialist support can be shattering. Child victims of trafficking can be still under the control of their trafficker when first encountered by police, immigration or social work teams. Children are groomed what to say and will almost certainly not have their own identification documents. Even after being taken into care children can be threatened, coerced or forced to return to the trafficker. Training and clear procedures are needed to ensure safety plans are enacted within the 'Golden Hour', the very first hour after encountering the child and the immediate 24 hours after that. However, these plans should not be dependent on a child's disclosure but by a robust and early identification process that acts quickly on the basis of professional 'I suspect but I cannot prove' that will trigger a multi-agency assessment and protection protocols.

The UK Government has ratified a number of international instruments that require it to take all steps to provide 'special protection measures' for child victims of trafficking, including specific references to guardianship. Article 16 of the EU Directive on combating trafficking is to "take the necessary measures to ensure that, where appropriate, a guardian is appointed to unaccompanied child victims of trafficking in human beings". This is yet to happen as part of the government's human trafficking strategy but ECPAT UK is campaigning vigorously so that each child who is suspected as being trafficked would have one person that they could trust, who could act in their best interest and who would assist them navigate the maze of legal, welfare, immigration, health and education services. It is important to recognise that in most circumstances these vulnerable, isolated children will not speak English and will have no-one in the UK who they know or who can help them. It is not uncommon for family members in their home country to have been complicit in the sale or traffic of children and therefore it can never be assumed that going home will be safe.

ECPAT UK was the first organisation to uncover the extremely high numbers of suspected and known trafficked children who have gone missing from Local Authority care and are never found. ECPAT UK's 2007 report Missing Out report identified 80 known or suspected child victims of trafficking in a small-scale study in Manchester, Newcastle and the West Midlands. Forty-eight of these children went missing whilst in local authority care. In the same year, the Child Exploitation & Online Protection Centre (CEOP) estimated in its own report that over an 18 month period, 183 of 330 victims of child trafficking had gone missing from local authority accommodation illustrating major problems in providing safe placement.

The concept of 'safeness' and protection can only be fully realised when children believe that they have a safe haven that affords them more protection than being back on the streets or with the traffickers. There are no quality standards across the UK for the provision of 'safe accommodation' for child victims of trafficking but it is incumbent on all professionals to work collaboratively to ensure a circle of safety is placed around the child without waiting for them to ask for it.

There are concerns that human traffickers could target the Olympics and the government is working with a range of agencies, including charities like ECPAT UK to deter and detect trafficking. The main identified risk to children is through organised criminal gangs exploiting children through forced begging and pick pocketing. The Olympics presents an opportunity for those criminal gangs already active in the UK to capitalise on local communities and a huge influx of visitors. Hugh Robertson, Minister for Sport and the Olympics recently stated that 'Regular threat briefings take place between the Secretary of State, the Minister for Sport and the Olympics, and the Olympic Intelligence Centre, and departments will be continuously reviewing the threat of human trafficking'.4

1 http://www.soca.gov.uk/about-soca/about-the-ukhtc/statistical-data
2 Missing Out ; A Study of Child Trafficking in the North-West, North-East and West Midlands Beddoe C ECPAT UK London 2007
3 A Scoping Report on Child Trafficking in the UK Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre and Border and Immigration Agency, London June 2007
4 House of Commons, Hansard Written Answers for 11th January 2011


Christine Beddoe is Director of ECPAT UK

ECPAT UK (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and the Trafficking of Children) has been campaigning against the sexual exploitation and trafficking of children since 1994. ECPAT UK works in the UK and with international partners to research, provide training and advice and provide a valuable advocacy and support network for child victims of trafficking. ECPAT UK advises the All Party Parliamentary Group on Trafficking of Women and Children by providing guidance and support on issues specific to child trafficking.

www.ecpat.org.uk
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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

ConservativeHome's Platform: Peter Bone MP: Can the Big Society Help Fight Modern Day Slavery?

Peter Bone is MP for Wellingborough and co-chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Human Trafficking.

Peter Bone
Anthony Steen, when Chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Human Trafficking which he founded in 2006, not only raised awareness of the scale and effects of human trafficking into the UK and the EU, but also put forward practical solutions to reduce supply and demand, and to improve welfare provisions for victims. 

The European Commission estimates that a minimum of 100,000 people are trafficked into and around the EU each year, with at least 5,000 victims arriving in the UK.

Unfortunately, the UK statistics are inconsistent and unreliable; the Metropolitan Police believe that as far as sex trafficking in London alone is concerned, there are some 4,000 women trafficked annually into brothels, massage parlours, and the like. Human trafficking is now the second most profitable criminal activity in the world, netting $32 billion per year to traffickers. 

Despite its relative youth, the Group has garnered widespread recognition and praise across Government for its commitment to its cause and far-reaching work.  Immigration Minister Damian Green MP described the APPG as “an absolute model of how one can use an all-party group to shift public policy forward an inch or two.”  Reconvened in July 2010 under the joint chairmanship of myself and Baroness Butler-Sloss, it now boasts 12 officers representing in both the Commons and the Lords and is one of the largest all party groups in parliament.

ECPAT UK (coordinating Anti-Slavery International, Jubilee Campaign, NSPCC, Save the Children UK, The Children’s Society, UNICEF UK, and World Vision UK), a leading charity dedicated to combating child trafficking, provides information to the Parliamentary Group members, whilst Anthony Steen (now chairing the Human Trafficking Foundation) is the Group’s Special Adviser.

Through its pan-European campaign, the APPG has established similar cross party parliamentary groups in Spain, Germany, Bulgaria, Romania, Lithuania, Latvia, Denmark, Italy, Poland, Greece, Cyprus, and Estonia. Creating a network right across European parliaments is the aim.

The group’s biggest challenge now is how to guide the new government on how best to address this hidden and growing scourge which presents itself in many different guises and how better to help victims cope with their situation. There are a number of issues which need urgent consideration. Should the scope of the Gangmasters (Licensing) Authority be extended to include the hospitality, tourism and agriculture industries, and so better tackle the growth of labour exploitation?

In an answer to me on July 22nd, Home Secretary, Theresa May, said: “Tackling human trafficking is a coalition priority, and the Government are currently considering how to improve our response to this terrible crime, including through the creation of a border police”.

Questions need to be asked regarding the closure of the United Kingdom Human Trafficking Centre and the loss of some fifty staff as well as the consequences of the demise of the Serious Organised Crime Agency.
What will happen to the National Referral Mechanism, by which those who have been trafficked are formally identified? Who will coordinate that and what skills will the interrogators have? What effect will these two closures have on human trafficking? Should we continue to turn a blind eye to this?

Perhaps the Government need look no further and enlist some of the top-class Non-Governmental Organisations willing and able to give practical help in solving some of these problems. They are certainly up to it. Isn’t this part of David Cameron’s “Big Society”, and shouldn’t the NGOs whom the previous administration ignored, be more involved? We recently heard the excellent announcement of locally-elected Police Commissioners – could they be required to report annually of Human Trafficking in the area?

If savings are to be made (e.g. £1.8m for the UKHTC), why not enlist NGOs like ECPAT UK to help with the National Referral Mechanism? Government could do no better than to bring in Kalayaan, whose sterling work fighting domestic slavery is well known. Poppy is a professionally run housing association caring for fifty or more abused women in at any one time in London alone: shouldn’t their ten years of experience be spread to other metropolitan areas? As Chairman of the All-Party Group, with the help of the Human Trafficking Foundation, I want to encourage government to take a lead in promoting the growth of networks of parliamentarians right across the EU, both to deter traffickers and to develop a more caring strategy towards victims.

William Wilberforce banished overt slavery 200 years ago yet today new slavery is even more widespread and an even more daunting challenge because it is ingrained in our society yet hidden from view.

ConservativeHome's Platform: Peter Bone MP: Can the Big Society Help Fight Modern Day Slavery?
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Thursday, July 15, 2010

Child trafficking petition urges guardianship system for victims | Law | The Guardian

Campaigners call on government to introduce new strategy after research shows more than half of victims go missing from care
Protesters outside the Houses of Parliament campaigning against  the sex trafficking of young people
Protesters outside the Houses of Parliament campaigning yesterday against child trafficking. Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty Images

The government is facing renewed calls to introduce a system of guardianship for victims of child trafficking after research showed that more than half of those identified as victims go missing from care.

A petition is being launched today by Ecpat UK, the campaign to end the sexual exploitation of children, and the Body Shop, demanding that the government pledges to look after trafficked children. They often end up in prostitution, domestic servitude, criminal rings or the drug trade.

An opinion poll found that 86% of adults believe the government must establish a system of guardianship so that every identified child has someone to take parental responsibility for them. Almost half (44%) said they believe the way the British authorities deal with trafficked children is unacceptable.

The campaign has attracted celebrity supporters including Joanna Lumley, Ben Kingsley, Robert Pattison and Yoko Ono.

"It's hard for us to comprehend what victims of child trafficking have gone through or to even believe that such a repulsive crime could ever take place here, but it does," Lumley told the Guardian. "Children who have been trafficked will often have faced appalling situations of exploitation and abuse. They desperately need the support of a designated adult who, in the absence of a parent, will care for them, support them and prevent them from facing further exploitation and harm from their traffickers. Having been rescued once, it is all too easy to let these vulnerable children fall through the net."

The actors Sienna Miller, Matt LeBlanc and Rob Lowe, model, Naomi Campbell and singers Craig David and Martine McCutcheon have also backed the campaign.

Research by the Home Office's Centre for Exploitation and Online Protection has shown that 55% of children identified as trafficked go missing from local authority care and are never found. Charities working with victims believe this is because their trafficker has either gained control over them or they run away in fear of being found by their trafficker. Last year, the Guardian exposed the case of a council reception centre for trafficked children near Heathrow, from which 77 Chinese children went missing in less than three years.

"Children who have been trafficked will often have faced appalling situations of exploitation and abuse," said Christine Beddoe, director of Ecpat UK. "They desperately need the support of a designated adult who, in the absence of a parent, can take decisions on the child's behalf and ensure they have access to safe accommodation, education and the medical, practical and legal support they need to help rebuild their lives."

The campaign is the first concerted attempt to bring the issue of child trafficking into the wider public consciousness. One in five British adults still do not believe that children are trafficked to the UK. In reality, says Ecpat UK, hundreds of children – some as young as 11 – from over 50 countries are exploited in the UK every year. Last month, the UK's Anti Trafficking Monitoring Group, made up of charities including Amnesty International, Anti-Slavery International and Unicef, said Britain was breaking the European convention against trafficking and was breaching UK law.

It said that children who may have been trafficked are too often treated as criminals and that the government has presided over an ongoing scandal of trafficked children going missing from care, said the group. The system, it concluded, was "not fit for purpose".

The petition will be open for signatures around the world and the UK section will be delivered to the prime minister in 2011.



Child trafficking petition urges guardianship system for victims | Law | The Guardian



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