Prime minister has also set up new taskforce to coordinate government response to modern slavery
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The battle against modern slavery in Britain is to get a £33m boost, Theresa May has announced.
The prime minister said the money would be targeted at dealing with
the routes of the people-trafficking trade in countries such as Nigeria,
as she unveiled a new taskforce that is to coordinate the government
response to slavery.
Ministers estimate there are between 10,000 and 13,000 potential victims of slavery in the UK.
A review by barrister Caroline Haughey to mark the first anniversary of the Modern Slavery
Act found that 289 modern slavery offences were prosecuted in 2015, and
there was a 40% rise in the number of victims referred for support.
The government has also asked Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of
Constabulary (HMIC) to assess the police response to modern slavery.
May said: “This government is determined to build a Great Britain
that works for everyone and will not tolerate modern slavery, an evil
trade that shatters victims’ lives and traps them in a cycle of abuse.
“Last year I introduced the world-leading Modern Slavery Act to send
the strongest possible signal that victims were not alone and that those
responsible for this vile exploitation would face justice.
“We must do more and the historic £33.5m will allow us to go even further to support victims,” she added.
“Alongside this, the Haughey and HMIC reviews send a clear message
that the criminal justice system must ensure that perpetrators have
nowhere left to hide. I am pleased to see progress but we will not stop
until slavery is consigned to the history books.”
Haughey, who has prosecuted a variety of servitude, slavery and
human-trafficking cases including the first case of modern slavery,
said: “The Modern Slavery Act has set an international benchmark to
which other jurisdictions aspire. The act itself is fit for purpose and
our priority should be to maximise the impact of the provisions that
came into force a year ago.
“One year on, law enforcement agencies are using the powers in the
act and the number of prosecutions and of victims supported has
increased. But this is a generational fight to protect the vulnerable
and voiceless and I believe we need to do more.
“There is a lack of consistency in how law enforcement and criminal
justice agencies deal with the victims and perpetrators of modern
slavery. We need better training, better intelligence and a more
structured approach to identifying, investigating, prosecuting and
preventing slavery, including learning from what works and what does
not.”
The move came as the UK’s anti-slavery commissioner warned that people-trafficking cases are not being investigated properly.
Kevin Hyland expressed concern at the levels of potential slavery
incidents being recorded as crimes. “What’s alarming about that is that
we do have people reporting to the authorities, but then they are not
being properly investigated,” the commissioner told the BBC.
“The real concern that I have is that in 2015 we had 986 cases
involving minors, yet the official figures show that there’s only 928
actual crime recorded incidents. So that means ... potentially the cases
involving minors are not being investigated properly.
“The fact that the number of crimes recorded hasn’t even reached the
number of minors actually tells me that all these cases ... they are not
being investigated properly because until they are recorded properly,
and there are the resources put into it to see what the circumstances
are behind that, we can’t be satisfied that we can say it is, or it
isn’t, a crime of modern slavery.”
The global trade in people is estimated to cost £113bn, with human
trafficking for sexual exploitation believed to cost the UK £890m.
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