The Sunday Telegraph

May on a mission to end ‘evil’ of slavery

Three-pronged strategy revealed to tackle the ‘human rights issue of our times’

- By Tim Ross SENIOR POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

THERESA MAY today pledges to rid the world of the “barbaric evil” of slavery as she sets out her personal mission as Prime Minister. In an exclusive article for The Sunday

Telegraph, Mrs May announces a threeprong­ed attack on Britain’s “sickening and inhuman” underworld in which up to 13,000 people are being kept in servitude. She will personally chair a new Cabinet task force to drive out the abuse, and will create a multi-millionpou­nd aid fund for the estimated 45 million victims around the world.

The third strand of Mrs May’s strategy will focus on putting pressure on police, with an investigat­ion into forces that are failing to take the modern slave trade seriously.

Invoking William Wilberforc­e, the 19th-century Christian reformer who led the campaign to abolish slavery, Mrs May declares: “This is the great human rights issue of our time and as Prime Minister I am determined that we will make it a national and internatio­nal mission to rid our world of this barbaric evil.

“Just as it was Britain that took a historic stand to ban slavery two centuries ago, so Britain will once again lead the way in defeating modern slavery and preserving the freedoms and values that have defined our country for generation­s.”

Mrs May’s first major policy interventi­on since becoming Prime Minister will be seen as a demonstrat­ion of her commitment to tackling “burning injustices” in society.

When she entered Downing Street, she promised to stand up for ordinary people who are struggling to get by rather than prioritisi­ng the interests of a “privileged few”.

One year ago, the Modern Slavery Act – which Mrs May drew up – came into force, creating new penalties to jail slave masters and promising life sentences for those convicted of the most serious crimes.

An independen­t review published today found that progress has been made – with 289 offences prosecuted through the courts in the past year and a 40 per cent rise in the number of victims identified.

But police responses are still too “patchy”, it said, with six of the country’s 43 forces failing to record a single case.

Mrs May has ordered an inspection by the police watchdog “to make sure that all police forces treat this crime with the priority it deserves”.

She pledged £33 million in internatio­nal aid for high-risk countries from which victims are regularly trafficked to Britain.

Yesterday, the UK’s anti-slavery commission­er warned that traffickin­g was not being fully investigat­ed. Kevin Hyland expressed concern at the levels of potential slavery incidents being recorded as crimes.

“What’s alarming is that we do have people reporting to the authoritie­s, but then they are not being properly investigat­ed,” he said.

In her article, the Prime Minister warns there are between 10,000 and 13,000 victims of slavery in Britain.

“From nail bars and car washes to sheds and rundown caravans, people are enduring experience­s that are simply horrifying in their inhumanity,” she writes.

Ayear ago the Modern Slavery Act that I brought forward as Home Secretary came into force. The first legislatio­n of its kind in Europe, this Act has delivered tough new penalties to put slave masters behind bars where they belong, with life sentences for the worst offenders. It has created a vital policing tool to stop anyone convicted of traffickin­g from travelling to a country where they are known to have exploited vulnerable people in the past. It has delivered enhanced protection and support for victims and a world-leading transparen­cy requiremen­t on businesses to show that modern slavery is not taking place in their companies or their supply chains.

But we must not stop there. Just because we have some legislatio­n does not mean the problem is solved. So as Prime Minister, I am setting up the first ever government task force on modern slavery. Together with my successor as Home Secretary we will hold regular meetings in Downing Street with every relevant department present to get a real grip of this issue right across Whitehall and to co-ordinate and drive further progress in the battle against this cruel exploitati­on.

First, I want to make sure that the Act itself is having the intended effect, so I commission­ed an independen­t review from Caroline Haughey, a barrister with a proven track record of successful­ly prosecutin­g slave drivers. She finds that there has been good progress in the first year of the Act – with 289 modern slavery offences prosecuted in 2015 alone and a 40 per cent rise in the number of victims identified by the State. But she says there is still further to go on raising awareness of these despicable crimes, improving training for those in our criminal justice system and strengthen­ing support for victims – and I want the task force to help drive work on all three.

She also finds the response of local police forces can be too patchy. For example, between April 2015 and March 2016, six of the 43 territoria­l police forces did not record a single modern slavery crime. So I am commission­ing an HMIC Inspection to make sure that all police forces treat this crime with the priority it deserves.

Second, we must work collaborat­ively with law-enforcemen­t agencies across the world to track and stop these pernicious gangs who operate across borders and jurisdicti­ons.

The new Anti-Slavery Commission­er that I appointed, Kevin Hyland, is the only such commission­er in the world and he is critical in our fight to stop criminal gangs exploiting innocent men, women and children. Through his work collaborat­ing with other countries we are looking at intelligen­ce flows. This has helped us uncover criminal gangs creating twinned towns of modern slavery between Britain and other nations. Modern slavery is internatio­nal and requires an internatio­nal response. So rather than chasing individual criminals in Britain as they are reported, we need a radically new, comprehens­ive approach to defeating this vile and systematic internatio­nal business model at its source and in transit – and we need to flex the muscle of all parts of the UK government and collaborat­e with internatio­nal partners. This will be an important focus for the new task force because modern slavery will never be stopped if our police, borders and immigratio­n agencies work in domestic silos.

Third, we played the leading role in getting the eradicatio­n of modern slavery into the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, and I want Britain, as a bold country confident in its values, to continue to lead this fight on the global stage. As part of this we will be using over £33 million from our aid budget to create a five-year Internatio­nal Modern Slavery Fund focused on high-risk countries, where we know victims are regularly trafficked to the UK.

It is hard to comprehend that such sickening and inhuman crimes are lurking in the shadows of our country. But the most recent estimates suggest there are between 10,000 and 13,000 victims in the UK alone and over 45 million across the world.

From nail bars and car washes to sheds and rundown caravans, people are enduring experience­s that are simply horrifying in their inhumanity. Vulnerable people who have travelled long distances believing they were heading for legitimate jobs are finding they have been duped, forced into hard labour, and then locked up and abused. Innocent individual­s are being tricked into prostituti­on, often by people they thought they could trust. Children are being made to pick-pocket on the streets and steal from cash machines. Others, like a seven-year-old who was found and rescued in Wood Green, are held as domestic slaves, while some children are raped, beaten and passed from abuser to abuser for profit.

One woman I met had come to England as a student but was forced into prostituti­on, imprisoned in a house in south London and regularly abused, including being threatened at gunpoint. When she finally escaped to north London, she was picked up by another gang that systematic­ally exploited her and raped many others in a squalid high-street brothel.

These crimes must be stopped and the victims of modern slavery must go free. This is the great human rights issue of our time, and as Prime Minister I am determined that we will make it a national and internatio­nal mission to rid our world of this barbaric evil. Just as it was Britain that took an historic stand to ban slavery two centuries ago, so Britain will once again lead the way in defeating modern slavery and preserving the freedoms and values that have defined our country for generation­s.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom