The second
annual Global Slavery Index (GSI) has shown that 35.8 million people are
subject to modern day slavery - some 20 percent more worldwide than initially
thought. The highest total of slaves was in India.
Deutsche Welle, 17 Nov 2014
The results
of a survey published on Monday by anti-slavery campaign group Walk Free
estimates that some 35.8 million people are currently trapped in modern day
slavery.
In its
second annual report, the 2014 Global Slavery Index (GSI) said that due to new
methods, some 20 percent more people are enslaved around the world that
previously thought.
"There
is an assumption that slavery is an issue from a bygone era. Or that it only
exists in countries ravaged by war and poverty," said Andrew Forrest,
chairman of the Australian-based Walk Free Foundation.
Widespread
Forced into
in a life of cotton picking, cannabis growing, prostitution, fighting wars or
cleaning up after the wealthy account for just some of the definitions of
modern slavery across the 167 countries which were covered in the GSI report.
Debt
bondage, forced marriage and the sale or exploitation of children, as well as
human trafficking are also included in the foundation's interpretation of modern
slavery.
The report
also showed that modern slavery contributed to the production of at least 12
goods from 58 countries.
Social norm
According
to the Index, the biggest offender, with the highest proportion of its
population enslaved, remains the West African nation of Mauritania. Despite
Mauritania's anti-slavery legislation, it is rarely enforced and the slavery of
black Moors by Berber Arabs is an entrenched part of society.
Following
Mauritania in second place was Uzbekistan where, every autumn, the government
forces over one million people, including children, to harvest cotton.
The highest
number of total slaves was found in India where an estimated 14.29 million
people live a life of slavery. The Index said, however, that India had recently
taken important steps to combat the problem by strengthening its criminal
justice framework through legislative amendments and increasing the number of
its anti-human-trafficking police units.
'Appalling
situations'
At the
opposite end of the scale, the GSI report also showed that the countries doing
the most to combat the problem were the Netherlands, Sweden, the US, Australia,
Switzerland, Ireland, Norway, the UK, Georgia, and Austria.
Despite
being at the bottom of the list, Europe still has 566,000 people involved in
forms of modern slavery. For example, people are trafficked into Ireland to
grow cannabis, or forced into begging in France.
"These
findings show that modern slavery exists in every country. We are all
responsible for the most appalling situations where modern slavery exists and
the desperate misery it brings upon our fellow human beings," said
Forrest.
ksb/se
(AFP, 2014 Global Slavery Index)

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