Halifax Courier

Modern slavery offences are going unpunished, data shows

- Georgina Morris

POLICE FORCES have failed to bring charges for more than 19,000 slavery and traffickin­g crimes since landmark legislatio­n was passed, with suspects facing action in fewer than one in 20 cases.

The Modern Slavery Act 2015 was designed to crack down on the crime – which ranges from forced prostituti­on to labour exploitati­on and domestic servitude – with its simplified offences and tougher punishment­s.

But a JPIMedia investigat­ion has exposed the extent to which perpetrato­rs are escaping justice, with just 4.4 per cent of modern slavery offences recorded by English and Welsh police forces between 2015 and September 2020 resulting in a charge.

In West Yorkshire, only 52 of the 1,150 offences recorded in that period have resulted in a charge – a rate of 4.5 per cent.

The Human Traffickin­g Foundation, which brings together charities, public bodies and parliament­arians working to tackle slavery, has now said “radical” change is needed to how UK authoritie­s pursue offenders and support victims.

Home Office figures show police forces in England and Wales have recorded 19,632 offences under the Modern Slavery Act to date, yet only 864 saw a suspect charged.

The proportion of cases resulting in a charge has fallen every year since 2015 as the volume of offences has increased.

In 2015/16, 23.7 per cent of cases saw charges brought but this rate had fallen to 2.9 per cent by 2019/20.

And figures published since the coronaviru­s pandemic began reveal the charge rate has plummeted further still, to just 2 per cent between April and September last year.

The figures refer to the period in which an offence outcome was recorded, not when the offence took place. Cases are not recorded until they have been closed or a charge brought.

It means a total of 19,175 cases across Britain have seen no action taken, including 1,098 in West Yorkshire.

Mark Burns-Williamson, West Yorkshire’s Police and Crime Commission­er, said he was not surprised by the charge rate given his time as modern slavery lead for the Associatio­n of Police and Crime Commission­ers as well as his role in setting up local and national antitraffi­cking networks.

“These are human rights abuses committed against the most vulnerable in our communitie­s and society, and that’s whether they’re trafficked from abroad or, increasing­ly, from within the UK,” he said. “What we’ve seen certainly in the last two or three years is connectivi­ty with things like county lines crimes and other legislatio­n that can be used to tackle these perpetrato­rs. I don’t always take these statistics from the Home Office on face value because I know of the complexity of investigat­ions that take place and the links to other types of crimes.”

For the small proportion of cases that do make it to court, analysis of Ministry of Justice figures shows just 21.5 per cent end in a conviction, with only 74 successful cases out of 344 court proceeding­s in England and Wales between 2015 and 2019 where modern slavery was the principal offence.

Tamara Barnett, director of the Human Traffickin­g Foundation, said modern slavery cases were often “very, very difficult” to investigat­e and that a lack of wider support for victims means they are often distrustfu­l of and unwilling to work with police.

Mr Burns-Williamson added: “Some of them don’t even recognise or realise that they are victims. Obviously there’s intimidati­on and threats to those victims around their families back in their home countries or indeed in this country.”

Responding to the figures, the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) said it recognised charges and referrals to the Crown Prosecutio­n Service had not kept pace with the increase in crimes.

Sheon Sturland, head of the NPCC modern slavery and organised immigratio­n crime unit, added: “Police are identifyin­g more victims of modern slavery than ever before.”

West Yorkshire Police was invited to comment.

“These are human rights abuses committed against the most vulnerable in our communitie­s.”

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 ??  ?? STARK: Just 4.5 per cent of modern slavery offences recorded in West Yorkshire resulted in a charge.
STARK: Just 4.5 per cent of modern slavery offences recorded in West Yorkshire resulted in a charge.

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