Daily News

New tools to put a roadblock on UK traffickin­g

Modern slavery has become a catch-all term to describe human traffickin­g, forced labour, debt bondage, sex traffickin­g, forced marriage and other slave-like exploitati­on

- SCOTT CORBEN

IN A BRITISH suburb in central England, police officers accustomed to burglaries and household disturbanc­es are breaking new ground by finding ways to battle the latest crime wave: human traffickin­g.

Sergeant Alex Sobolewski of the West Midlands Police, based at Brierley Hill about 210km north-west of London, said a large part of his work now concerns human traffickin­g, a crime barely discussed five years ago.

With an estimated 46 million people globally living in slavery, human traffickin­g is being taken increasing­ly seriously in all countries with Britain home to about 13 000 slaves and authoritie­s identifyin­g 3 260 victims last year.

Modern slavery has become a catch-all term to describe human traffickin­g, forced labour, debt bondage, sex traffickin­g, forced marriage and other slave-like exploitati­on.

Sobolewski, born in Poland but moved to Britain aged six, said the West Midlands police were having to find new ways to stop trafficker­s exploiting vulnerable people from Poland and Romania as cheap labour.

Identifyin­g victims was the first challenge as often these people did not realise they were being abused and then it was critical to find practical means to stop the trafficker­s.

“These will be perhaps people with an alcohol dependency. Certainly people unem- ployed. They will target homeless people, who really don’t have great prospects in life,” Sobolewski said.

“They will bring these people over. And I suppose that’s why some of them don’t really see themselves as victims. They’ll see that the life over here, however hard and bad it is, it’s better than it is in Poland.”

Of the people identified as victims of modern slavery in Britain last year, 139 were Pol- ish nationals brought over for labour exploitati­on with West Midlands Police currently investigat­ing 70 claims of human traffickin­g from Poland.

According to Britain’s 2011 Census, more than 52 000 people from Poland were living in the West Midlands.

In the West Midlands, long an important centre of commerce and industry for Britain, Sobolewski said workers were in demand in factories of all kinds and recycling plants.

“Often, the employers aren’t aware that these people are being exploited,” said Sobolewski, a keen triathlete who is clearly protective and keen to help his Polish compatriot­s.

“Wages will get paid into a worker’s account… and somebody will come and draw that money for them and give them a cut. A cut, and usually it will be a very small cut of what they’ve earned for that week.”

Britain has taken a lead internatio­nally in trying to crack down on human traffickin­g, introducin­g the Modern Slavery Act last year which has been hailed as a milestone for combining harsh penalties with progressiv­e measures such as better protection­s for people at risk of being enslaved.

From life imprisonme­nt for human trafficker­s to forcing pimps to pay compensati­on to their victims, Britain now has some of the world’s toughest sanctions against modern slavery.

It also requires companies to disclose what they are doing to make sure supply chains are free from slavery.

Police

Sobolewski, who has been in the police about 14 years, said progress was being made but it was a difficult as trafficker­s often target the most vulnerable people, who are lured with false promises of well-paid jobs.

During a recent raid on a factory, his unit uncovered a large number of Polish workers, but rather than see the police there to help them as victims of traffickin­g, they thought the police were there to arrest them as part of a Brexit operation to round-up foreign workers for expulsion from the country.

Detective Constable Michelle Ohren said the psychologi­cal control used by the trafficker­s cannot be underestim­ated.

“You get to a situation where you find people that really think that this is their life. They have nothing, they have to do as they are told,” said Ohren, who trains other police officers to spot the signs of human traffickin­g.

“They (think) they have to live in this house and they have to go to work and if they only get £10 (R170) for working 60 hours that week, well then that’s life and what they have to put up with.”

Police, acting on informatio­n from victims and victims’ families, are making some headway by carrying out raids on workplaces, but they’ve realised they needed interprete­rs with them if they were to get to the bottom of what was really going on.

Sobolewski said it was important to get their trust and finds the fact that he speaks Polish is a great help.

“These people they are bringing in are really vulnerable… and they don’t have the English language skills and they have an inherent mistrust of the police,” he said.

“So a big barrier is actually persuading them that we can offer genuine help – that their conditions don’t have to be like this and there are agencies that can support them or help them.”

Also finding ways to stop the trafficker­s was seen as important, using practical steps like not allowing people to hold bank cards not in their own name and not seek employment for other people.

“It’s as a result of doing that we’ve made arrests of two of our offenders for breaching those restrictio­n orders earlier on this year. If found guilty, then they face a sentence of up to five years imprisonme­nt,” Ohren said.

“We believe we’re the first in the country to actually have made arrests and charges for breaches of restrictio­n orders.”

Sobolewski and Ohren also suspect the same issues exist in Romanian and Afghan communitie­s in the West Midlands.

“I’m sure they have exactly the same issues as all the other establishe­d communitie­s, but perhaps it’s that we find it difficult to speak to them to find out what those issues are,” said Sobolewski. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Police, acting on informatio­n from victims and victims’ families, are making some headway by carrying out raids on workplaces but realised they needed interprete­rs with them if they were to get to the bottom of what was really going on. Sobolewski said it was important to get their trust and finds the fact that he speaks Polish is a great help.
Police, acting on informatio­n from victims and victims’ families, are making some headway by carrying out raids on workplaces but realised they needed interprete­rs with them if they were to get to the bottom of what was really going on. Sobolewski said it was important to get their trust and finds the fact that he speaks Polish is a great help.
 ?? PICTURE: THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION ?? ‘These will be perhaps people with an alcohol dependency. Certainly people unemployed. They will target homeless people, people who really don’t have great prospects in life,’ Sergeant Alex Sobolewski said while giving a tour of the area.
PICTURE: THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION ‘These will be perhaps people with an alcohol dependency. Certainly people unemployed. They will target homeless people, people who really don’t have great prospects in life,’ Sergeant Alex Sobolewski said while giving a tour of the area.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa