San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

29 million girls, women victims of slavery, U. N. says

- By Edith M. Lederer

UNITED NATIONS — A new report estimates that 29 million women and girls are victims of modern slavery, exploited by practices including forced labor, forced marriage, debtbondag­e and domestic servitude.

Grace Forrest, cofounder the Walk Free antislaver­y organizati­on, said Friday that means one in every 130 women and girls is living in modern slavery today, more than the population of Australia.

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“The reality is that there are more people living in slavery today than any other time in human history,” she told a U. N. news conference.

Walk Free defines modern slavery “as the systematic removal of a person’s freedom, where one person is exploited by another for personal or financial gain,” she said.

Forrest said the global estimate of one in 130 women and girls living in modern slavery was made based on work by Walk Free, the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on and the

Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, both U. N. agencies..

“What this report has shown is that gender stacks the odds against girls from conception throughout their lives,” she said.

According to the report, titled “Stacked Odds,” women account for 99% of all victims of forced sexual exploitati­on, 84% of all victims of forced marriage, and 58% of all victims of forced labor.

Forrest said the face of modern slavery “has radically changed.”

“We’re seeing normalized exploitati­on in our economy in transnatio­nal supply chains and also in migration pathways,” she said. “The world’s most vulnerable people have been pushed even further into this practice of modern slavery because of COVID19.”

She said the estimate of women and girls in modern slavery is conservati­ve because it doesn’t account for what’s happened during the pandemic, which has seen “sharp increases of forced and child marriage and exploited work conditions around the world.”

The campaign urges an end to child and forced marriage, which 136 countries have yet to criminaliz­e.

It urges the eliminatio­n of legalized systems of exploitati­on such as kefala, which legally binds a migrant worker’s immigratio­n status to an employer or sponsor for their contract period.

Edith M. Lederer is an Associated Press writer.

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