Gulf News

Sexual exploitati­on on the rise online

From child drug mules to migrant smuggling, reports of slavery are soaring in Britain, data shows

-

From children being forced by gangs to carry illegal drugs, to migrants smuggled into Britain and trapped in exploitati­ve work, reports of slavery in Britain have surged as authoritie­s crack down on the crime, according to data released yesterday.

The National Crime Agency (NCA) said it received 5,145 reports of suspected slavery victims in 2017 across Britain, an increase of more than a third from 3,804 in 2016.

Criminal networks

Those involved were commonly British, Albanian and Vietnamese, said the NCA, which is dubbed Britain’s FBI, warning that criminal networks were heading online to sexually exploit people, especially through adult services websites.

“What this report reinforces is that we are now dealing with an evolving threat,” NCA director Will Kerr said in a statement.

“Particular­ly concerning to us is the rise in young people being exploited for sexual purposes or drug traffickin­g.”

The NCA said the jump in numbers was largely due to British children being reported to authoritie­s as suspected victims of sexual exploitati­on or being used by gangs to carry illegal drugs in the so-called ‘county lines’ drug trade.

There were also increased crossovers between smuggling rings, that transport vulnerable migrants into Britain, and slave masters, who force them into exploitati­ve work, Kerr said.

Kerr said the figures “almost certainly” represent an underestim­ate of the true scale of slavery and traffickin­g in Britain.

At least 13,000 people across Britain are estimated by the government to be victims of modern slavery — trapped in forced labour, sexual exploitati­on and domestic servitude — but police say the true figure is likely to be in the tens of thousands. Britain is regarded as a leader in global efforts to combat slavery, with its 2015 Modern Slavery Act introducin­g life sentences for trafficker­s, forcing companies to address the risk of forced labour, and better protect people at risk.

The National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) said on Monday it held 568 police operations in February alone but despite more arrests, authoritie­s are struggling to jail slave masters.

5,145 reports of suspected slavery victims in 2017 across Britain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates