Rise
in 'slavery' trafficking of homeless by gangs
Charities
report at least 37 incidents so far this year of people forced to
work for no pay
30
September, 2012
Reported
cases of "modern-day slavery" are becoming increasingly
common, according to the police and homeless charities.
Thames
Reach, which works with homeless people in London, said that so far
this year, it was aware of at least 37 incidents involving vulnerable
people who had been forced to work for little or no pay and even made
to break the law, compared with 22 last year.
Megan
Stewart, reconnections manager with Thames Reach, said the recent
court case in which four men from a caravan site in Bedfordshire were
convicted of controlling and exploiting homeless people had brought
about a shift in how society viewed the problem. "People are
getting better at spotting the signs," Stewart said. "Since
the Luton story broke, the police are taking it more seriously when
our guys report it."
The
exploitation involves trafficking people into the UK but also
targeting homeless people on the streets.
The
Passage Day Centre in London's Victoria, which helps homeless people,
said its clients were regularly targeted both at the centre and at
soup runs. "A couple of weeks ago, some people approached our
clients with the offer of work in Belgium," said Mick Clarke,
who runs the centre. "They said they'd provide them with
accommodation and money and when we challenged them, they sped off.
It struck me how brazen they are in targeting the vulnerable."
Clarke
said the gangs were benefiting from a "perfect storm"
because the economic downturn meant people were ripe for
exploitation. "It's linked to the economy – people are more
and more desperate," Clarke said. "And there is real
diversity in the backgrounds of people who are doing this – there
are builders, people in suits, people from all ethnicities."
In
many cases, those who were exploited had been offered alcohol as "a
reward" and had been told that they or their families back home
would face violence if they reported what had happened to them.
A
man from eastern Europe who was referred to Thames Reach by St
Thomas's hospital had been trafficked into the country by a gang.
When he complained about not being paid, he was beaten up and left on
the streets with brain damage.
Other
cases include two Hungarian men who were held by travellers in
Birmingham and forced to work on driveways, and a Czech man who was
beaten by the owners of a car wash in north London before escaping.
Another Czech resident did agency work in factories and farms across
England, but his wages were paid to the gang who had brought him in.
A 29-year-old wheelchair user was forced to beg to raise money for a
gang that was exploiting him.
Much
of the exploitation appears organised. Thames Reach said it was aware
of reports that a criminal gang was trafficking people from the
Lithuanian town of Panevezys on a twice-weekly basis.
"There
is a wide range of exploitation," said Detective Inspector Kevin
Hyland, operational head of the Metropolitan police's
anti-trafficking unit, which now operates four joint investigation
teams focused on Bulgaria, Romania, the Czech Republic and Poland.
"You
get the seven-year-old child who is treated as a slave in Haringey …
someone being trafficked through the UK to another country, and then
someone else who has been brought over to supply the sex market."
Hyland
said his teams had uncovered examples of men who were trafficked into
the UK to work in illegal casinos and who were required to give
sexual services to gamblers during their breaks. There was also a
51-year-old man who believed he was being brought to the UK to work
as an electrician but instead was forced to go out and commit petty
crime or be raped if he refused.
The
Department for Communities and Local Government has worked with the
Passage to fund a campaign in Poland to highlight the issue.
Embassies in eastern Europe and the Middle East are also helping to
raise awareness of the risk involved in working in the UK.
Hyland
said vulnerable people often did not recognise their predicament.
"Maybe because of their mental state or because they are
dependent on drugs or alcohol, they may not be able to realise they
are being exploited," he added.In other cases it could be that
people had consented to being trafficked into but had been unaware
what would be involved when they arrived. "It could apply to man
being brought over for tarmacing or a woman for prostitution,"
Hyland said. "They might know what they are coming here for but
they don't appreciate how much they will have to work."
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