Hundreds of people from Nigeria are being illegally trafficked to the
UK, where they face sexual exploitation or being forced into domestic
servitude.
The anti-slavery commissioner, Kevin Hyland, said
tackling the flow of people from the African country was one of his main
priorities and promised to oversee work bringing together law
enforcement agencies in Nigeria and Europe to get to grips with the
problem.
Official figures show that more than 2,000 potential
trafficking victims were referred to the authorities in 2014 – 244 of
whom were from Nigeria, a 31% increase from the previous year.
The National Crime Agency statistics show the number of victims from Nigeria was second only to the total from Albania.
Hyland
told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I am extremely concerned about
this. And we’re talking about several hundred every year. This isn’t
just a one-off – it’s continuous – so the treatment of these people,
what they go through, is actually a very serious crime, so for me it’s a
big problem.
“But also I think the fact that there is a demand
for this kind of exploitation in the United Kingdom really concerns me,
that there are people who will want to buy sex, will want to exploit,
will want to have children as what are current-day slaves, so that is a
really serious problem.”
Hyland said international action was
needed to address the problem. He said: “It’s about working with the
law enforcement agencies in Nigeria – working with all those in the
communities and telling them this could happen – and that’s never been
brought together before, so it’s unique.
“This is a new idea –
Europol, Interpol, National Crime Agency, all must work together. It’s
up to me to oversee this. This is not about lack of resources but about
using them effectively.”
In December, the Home Office published
figures estimating there are between 10,000 and 13,000 potential victims
of slavery in the UK. They include women forced into prostitution,
domestic staff and workers in fields, factories and on fishing boats.
Earlier
this month, Hyland warned that “Oliver Twist scenarios” are taking
place on Britain’s streets as children are forced to engage in
pickpocketing, shoplifting and begging.
The former Metropolitan police detective was appointed in November to spearhead the government’s fight against modern slavery.
Source:
The Guardian UK
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