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Can we ever get rid of slavery?

 
 
dlowan
 
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 04:54 pm
I knew slavery still existed - but I was shamefully ignorant about where and how much and how - I get BBC program alerts - and this one came up (the radio program is available from here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/big_question.shtml 0 for seven days - and may be available from archives after that.)

Any thoughts or comments?? I will put some of the links from the BBC site in below.



Can we ever get rid of slavery?


Despite numerous laws and international conventions to outlaw it, slavery appears to be thriving. Millions of people around the world are held as slave workers -- more in fact than at the height of the transatlantic slave trade in the late eighteenth century. Today's Big Question is "Can we ever get rid of slavery?"

What do we mean by slavery?

"A person is held against their will under a threat of violence," says Professor Kevin Bales of the University of Mississippi. "Secondly they are being economically exploited and paid nothing and thirdly they cannot walk away." That applies equally to slaves in ancient Egypt, in Mississippi in 1850 or in London today.

How widespread is slavery?

The United Nations says 27 million people are held in conditions of slavery - from domestic servitude to human trafficking, from child labour to debt bondage - the most common form of modern-day slavery.

"I've met many families in India in their 4th generation of enslavement, against an original debt of say £20? They are absolutely trapped," says Kevin Bales - author of 'Disposable People: A new slavery in the global economy'.

Why is slavery so pervasive?

Kevin Bales points to the population growth in the developing world over the past 50 years coupled with the economic strains of globalisation and modernisation. He says about a billion people have been impoverished as a result. "They have no economic, social or political power. If you then add governmental corruption, people can use violence to turn those vulnerable people into slave workers." What is more, he says, because of this glut of potential slaves on the world market, the price they can fetch has fallen to an all-time low - and that has implications for the way they are treated, used and disposed of.

Today, though, slavery is illegal -- unlike in previous centuries when it was an integral part of the world's economic system. From the 15th to the late 18th century, for example, up to 13 million people were captured and shipped from West Africa to the New World of the Americas as part of the wider trading system. Conditions on board were appalling and many didn't survive the passage. Nineteenth century anti-slavery campaigns were some of the earliest pressure groups and were behind some of the first human rights laws.

What is being done about it today?

Article 4 of the 'Declaration of Human Rights' adopted in 1948, states that "No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms."

In 1956, the 'United Nations 1956 Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery' banned debt bondage, serfdom, servile marriage and child servitude.

But the illegal trade in humans is the third fastest growing crime after drug and arms.

"The trafficking in human beings is even more lucrative than the drugs trade, because with human beings you can sell them several times over," says Helga Konrad , the Special Representative on combating trafficking in Human Beings at the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe. Criminal groups make an estimated $10-12 billion through human trafficking.

"This is slavery", she says, "but unfortunately in many countries it is not recognised as that? It is very often the victims who are criminalised."

Many countries have started to reform their legislation and have made human trafficking a specific crime. But, she says, "It is only paper. What is needed is the implementation" - and that means better legislation, more law enforcement and stiffer sentences .

One country that says it wants to eradicate slavery completely is Brazil. When President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva came to power two years ago he pledged to eradicate slavery by 2006. Up to 40,000 people are thought to be held as slaves in Brazil -- in charcoal camps, sweat shops and cattle ranches in the Amazon.

"You sometimes found .. on the ranches .. (situations) where the cattle are very well treated with the latest technology .. but the men working there to clear the forest are treated worse than animals, " says Jan Rocha, author of the ILO's report "Study of the magnitude of slavery in Brazil".

In the past year, the Brazilian government has introduced hundreds of measures - stepping up raids, increasing the appearances of public prosecutors in remote areas and imposing heavier fines. But many of the slave owners have been found to be politicians.

"Slavery will only really come to an end in Brazil when it is seen as totally shocking, which it isn't yet. How can you have politicians, senators, congressmen, who are themselves slave owners?"
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dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 04:58 pm
Here is the UN Human Rights factsheet relating to the problem - with some suggestions:

http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu6/2/fs14.htm


Fact Sheet No.14, Contemporary Forms of Slavery
(About Fact Sheets)

No one shall be held in slavery or servitude: slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms.


Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights





Slavery: the modern reality


Slavery was the first human rights issue to arouse wide international concern. Yet, in the face of universal condemnation, slavery-like practices remain a grave and persistent problem in the closing years of the twentieth century.


The word "slavery" today covers a variety of human rights violations. In addition to traditional slavery and the slave trade, these abuses include the sale of children, child prostitution, child pornography, the exploitation of child labour, the sexual mutilation of female children, the use of children in armed conflicts, debt bondage, the traffic in persons and in the sale of human organs, the exploitation of prostitution, and certain practices under apartheid and colonial régimes.


Slavery-like practices may be clandestine. This makes it difficult to have a clear picture of the scale of contemporary slavery, let alone to uncover, punish or eliminate it. The problem is compounded by the fact that the victims of slavery-like abuses are generally from the poorest and most vulnerable social groups. Fear and the need to survive do not encourage them to speak out.


There is enough evidence, however, to show that slavery-like practices are vast and widespread. Just one figure tells a grim story: 100 million children are exploited for their labour, according to a recent estimate by the International Labour Organisation (ILO).


As a contribution to the campaign to raise public awareness of human rights issues, this Fact Sheet describes the modern forms of slavery, as well as the work done at the international level to halt and prevent it. There are also suggestions for private groups and individuals who can help by their action to build a universal human rights order in which slavery-like practices will no longer be tolerated.


Aspects of slavery


A stream of evidence presented to United Nations human rights bodies, notably the Working Group on Contemporary Forms of Slavery, as well as studies and the findings of special rapporteurs, give an accurate picture of current slavery-like practices. The descriptions which follow are drawn from these official sources.


They also reveal that there are no clear distinctions between different forms of slavery. The same families and groups of people are often the victims of several kinds of modern slavery-for example, bonded labour, forced labour, child labour or child prostitution-with extreme poverty as a common linking factor.


Child labour


Child labour is in great demand because it is cheap, and because children are naturally more docile, easier to discipline than adults, and too frightened to complain. Their small physique and nimble fingers are seen as assets by unscrupulous employers for certain kinds of work. It often happens that children are given jobs when their parents are sitting at home, unemployed.


There are children between seven and ten years of age who work twelve to fourteen hours a day and are paid less than one-third of the adult wage.


Child domestic servants not only work long hours for a pittance but are particularly vulnerable to sexual as well as other physical abuse.


At the extreme fringe, children are kidnapped, held in remote camps, and chained at night to prevent their escape. They are put to work on road-building and stone-quarrying.


Child labour, often hard and hazardous, damages health for life, deprives children of education and the normal enjoyment of their early years.


Non-governmental organizations have proposed an international timetable for the wiping out of the worst forms of child exploitation. They suggest that:


All forced labour camps be eliminated within 12 months;


Children be excluded from the most hazardous forms of work, as defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the ILO, by 1995;


All forms of labour for children under 10 outlawed by ILO Convention No. 138 be eliminated, and that those regarding children in the 10-14 age group be halved by the year 2000.


Children in armed conflict


Forcible recruitment of children into military service has been reported in many parts of the world. The consequences are devastating. Many have died or been disabled in armed operations, while others have been interrogated, tortured, beaten, or kept as prisoners of war.


The traffic in persons, sexual exploitation


The recruitment, clandestine transport and exploitation of women as prostitutes, and the organized prostitution of children of both sexes in a number of countries is well documented. A link has been established in some places between prostitution and pornography-particularly involving children-and the promotion and growth of tourism.


Sale of children


Unscrupulous go-betweens have found that large profits can be made by arranging the transfer of children from poverty-stricken homes to people with means-without guarantees and supervision to ensure that the child's interests will be protected. In such cases, financial gain-for the parents as well as the intermediaries-takes on the character of trading in children.


Debt bondage


Debt bondage can hardly be distinguished from traditional slavery because it prevents the victim from leaving his job or the land he tills until the money is repaid. Although in theory a debt is repayable over a period of time, a situation of bondage arises when in spite of all his efforts, the borrower cannot wipe it out. Normally, the debt is inherited by the bonded labourer's children. Sharecropping is a familiar way of leading borrowers into debt bondage.


Apartheid and colonialism


Apartheid is not simply a racial discrimination problem to be solved through education and political reform. In essence, apartheid has dispossessed the black population of South Africa by imposing a quasi-colonial system. Through coercive measures, the labour of the indigenous peoples has been harnessed for the profit of white investors.


By suppressing the human rights of entire populations, apartheid and other forms of colonialism have the effect of collective or group slavery. A pernicious quality is that the subject peoples have no choice: they are born into a state of slavery and have very little, if any, means of appeal against it.


Slavery: a state of mind


As a legally-permitted labour system, traditional slavery has been abolished everywhere, but it has not been completely stamped out. There are still reports of slave markets. Even when abolished, slavery leaves traces. It can persist as a state of mind-among its victims and their descendants and among the inheritors of those who practised it-long after it has formally disappeared.


International conventions


International concern with slavery and its suppression is the theme of many treaties, declarations and conventions of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The first of three modern conven-tions directly related to the issue is the Slavery Convention of 1926, drawn up by the League of Nations.


With the approval of the General Assembly, the United Nations formally became the successor to the League in the application of the Slavery Convention in 1953. States which have ratified the Convention-by 1990 86 had done so-undertake to prevent and suppress the slave trade and to bring about the abolition of slavery in all its forms.


In 1949, the General Assembly adopted the Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others. This legal instrument consolidated other international agreements dating back to 1904.


The procurer rather than the prostitute is the target of the Convention. It requires States Parties to introduce measures designed to prevent prostitution and to rehabilitate prostitutes.


States ratifying or acceding to the Convention-they numbered 60 by the end of 1990-also undertake to check the traffic in persons of either sex for the purpose of prostitution and to do away with laws, regulations, special registration, and other requirements of persons who are engaged-or suspected of engaging-in prostitution.


The 1926 Convention's definition of slavery was broadened to include the practices and institutions of debt bondage, servile forms of marriage, and the exploitation of children and adolescents in the Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery, adopted at a United Nations conference in Geneva in 1956. The Supplementary Convention has been ratified or acceded to by 106 States.


The Working Group on Contemporary Forms of Slavery is the United Nations body which receives information from States on the steps they have taken to implement the three slavery-related Conventions.


A number of other relevant Conventions have been adopted and are supervised by ILO.


Other means of protection


Protection against abuses of human rights which fall within the broad definition of slavery is a feature of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Committees established under each Covenant and Convention monitor their implementation by the States Parties.

In addition, there are United Nations channels for receiving specific complaints of violations of human rights, including those which merit the name of slavery.


The Convention on the Rights of the Child, which entered into force on 2 September, 1990, deserves special mention as the most recent and potentially one of the most effective means of combating slavery-like practices, taking into account the number of child victims. Properly implemented by States which have ratified it, the Convention offers protection to children at risk from sexual, economic, and other forms of exploitation, including their sale, trafficking and involvement in armed conflict.


(The texts of these international legal instruments and descriptions of the work of United Nations human rights bodies which monitor their application, as well as the procedures for communicating complaints of human rights violations to the United Nations are found in other publications in the Fact Sheet series. A list of titles of Fact Sheets already published is given on the inside back cover.)


Action in the United Nations


The Working Group on Contemporary Forms of Slavery* has the general responsibility in the United Nations for the study of slavery in all its aspects. Meeting for the first time in 1975 as the Working Group on Slavery, the group was renamed in 1988.

The Working Group consists of five independent experts* chosen on the basis of fair geographical representation from the membership of the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities. The group meets for one week each year and reports to the Sub-Commission.


* In 1990, the members of the Working Group were: Fatma Zohra Ksentini (Algeria) (chairperson/rapporteur), Ion Diaconu (Romania), Asbjorn Eide (Norway), Waleed M. Sadi (Jordan), Suescun Monroe (Colombia).


In addition to monitoring the application of the slavery conventions and making a review of the situation in different parts of the world, the group selects a theme for special attention each year. In 1989, the theme was prevention of the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography, and in 1990, eradication of the exploitation of child labour and debt bondage. The 1991 theme is the prevention of the traffic in persons and exploitation of the prostitution of others.


Programmes of national and international action to deal with the problems raised by the first two themes have been drafted by the Working Group, which expects to receive reactions to its proposals from governments and a wide range of organizations.


In 1992, the Working Group expects to evaluate its study of the three themes and to take up the idea of an international pledging conference to help put an end to the exploitation of child labour.


Special rapporteurs


On the Working Group's recommendation, the Commission on Human Rights appointed Vitit Muntarbhorn in 1990 as special rapporteur on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography, and the problem of the adoption of children for commercial purposes. He is due to report his findings and recommendations to the Commission in 1992.


This is the latest in a series of investigations, set in motion by the Working Group, which have shed light on contemporary forms of slavery, and proposed means of combating it.


In 1982, Benjamin Whitaker's updated report on slavery covered a range of topics, including forced labour, illicit trafficking in migrant workers, slavery-like practices involving women such as forced marriage, the sale of women and killings for reasons of dowry, and the genital mutilation of female children.


The exploitation of child labour was investigated by Abdelwahab Boudhiba. In his 1981 report to the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities he demonstrated that work done by children is often traumatic, and perverts the notions of work as a liberating force or as a means of development towards maturity.


Suppression of the traffic in persons and the exploitation of the prostitution of others was the subject of a report by Jean-Fernand Laurent to the Economic and Social Council. The Working Group is expected to take his recommendations into account in developing this theme in 1991.


At the invitation of the Government, a United Nations mission visited Mauritania in 1984 to study the country's needs in eliminating the consequences of slavery.


Recommendations


Among proposals for future action, the Working Group has recommended that:


A voluntary or trust fund be created which would make it possible for more directly-concerned organizations to take part in the Working Group's activities;


Where child labour might be involved-as in the making of carpets-the product should bear a special mark certifying that children have not been employed. Consumers should be alerted to demand products so marked;


Information campaigns for the boycotting of goods produced on the basis of exploited child labour be launched;


A seminar or workshop on debt bondage be organized by ILO in co-ordination with other United Nations bodies;


United Nations organs, specialized agencies, development banks and other intergovernmental bodies avoid the involvement of bonded labour in development projects with which they are concerned, and contribute to its elimination;


States co-operate in drawing up a convention on inter-country adoption as proposed at the Hague Conference on Private International Law.


Sources of information


In studying the current problems of slavery, setting priorities in its work, establishing the facts and making recommendations, the Working Group gathers information from a variety of sources. Governments co-operate and participate in its work, as do various United Nations bodies, intergovernmental organizations and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs).


Statements by governments have revealed their interest in and support for projects to help the victims of slavery-like practices. Governments also provide information on changes in domestic law designed to prevent or give better protection against these practices. Other government initiatives have concerned requests for advisory services in implementing United Nations conventions, co-ordination within the United Nations system in combating the traffic in persons, and putting the issue of sexual exploitation on the agenda of the Council of Europe.


NGOs make an important contribution to the Working Group's activities. At its sessions, they inform the Working Group of the situation as they see it in many parts of the world and describe their work and experience in eliminating practices condemned in the slavery conventions. Their involvement is in such areas as legal aid and assistance for children affected by states of emergency; rehabilitative services for children caught up in armed conflict; campaigns for the abolition of child prostitution; assistance in framing legislation on inter-country adoptions; and development assistance programmes for children who run the risk of sexual exploitation.


The Working Group also benefits from the information provided by the specialized agencies.


International co-operation


Efforts to eliminate contemporary forms of slavery involve a wide spectrum of international organizations, which have their own fields of action and which collaborate with the Working Group.


International Labour Organisation (ILO)


ILO has adopted two conventions which require the ratifying States to suppress and not to make use of any form of forced or compulsory labour. Convention No. 29 of 1930 prohibits forced labour in most of its forms, and Convention No. 105 of 1957 forbids its use for development. Each has received more than 100 ratifications.


The ILO 1973 Minimum Age Convention is designed to prevent the exploitation of child labour. It sets the minimum age for work at not less than the age of completion of compulsory schooling and in any case not less than 15 years (14 years for developing countries), and for work "likely to harm health, safety or morals" at not less than 18 years.


Governments report to ILO on the steps they take to comply with these international legal instruments. The reports are examined by the Committee of Experts on the Application of Conventions and Recommendations and by the International Labour Conference, and any problems are followed up until they are resolved.


ILO also carries out an active programme of technical assistance to combat child labour, bonded labour, and other unacceptable forms of exploitation.


ILO supplies information to the Working Group on Contemporary Forms of Slavery; in return, the proceedings of the Working Group throw light on the extent to which ILO conventions are being observed and on cases where ILO may offer assistance in solving problems.


World Health Organization (WHO)


WHO has confirmed at Working Group hearings that sex exploitation, debt bondage, the sale of children and the condition of apartheid all present grave risks to the mental health and social development of the children involved. Exploitation for sexual ends also adds to the risk of spreading the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and AIDS.


In addition to an offer to study the problem of child prostitution, and develop approaches on prevention and the treatment of health hazards, WHO and its regional offices are in a position to provide technical support for specific projects.


Guidelines are also being prepared by WHO on the issue of trafficking in human organs for transplantation purposes.


United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)


Slavery and slavery-like practices have been the subject of meetings and reports prepared under UNESCO auspices. As one example, UNESCO has sponsored a study by the International Catholic Child Bureau on the protection of minors from pornography.


In 1988, a UNESCO meeting studied the effects of armed conflict on children and recommended action to protect and promote their rights in such situations.


UNESCO is organizing in 1991 a meeting on the 1949 Convention on the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others. The aim is to make proposals to improve implementation of the Convention.


Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)


FAO's approach relates to servitude of children and debt bondage in connection with existing forms of land tenure. FAO activities which promote people's participation and give assistance to small farmers' organizations are seen as effective counter-measures to debt bondage.


United Nations Children's Fund UNICEF)


The role of UNICEF is crucial to international strategies to deal with the contemporary forms of slavery. UNICEF arranged massive support for the adoption and rapid ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and organized the World Summit for Children in New York in September, 1990.


The Summit approved at the highest political level a Declaration and Plan of Action for the survival, protection and development of children in the nineteen-nineties. In the Plan of Action, States are committed to work to ease the plight of millions of children who live under especially difficult circumstances-as orphans and street children, refugees or displaced persons, victims of war and natural and man-made disasters ... children of migrant workers and other socially disadvantaged groups, as child workers or youth trapped in the bondage of prostitution, sexual abuse and other forms of exploitation, as disabled children or juvenile delinquents and as victims of apartheid and foreign occupation.


Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)


A standing group of UNHCR monitors the situation of refugee children and the particular problems they encounter. Guidelines to UNHCR field offices on refugee children include the issues of recruitment in armed conflict and the adoption of unaccompanied minors.


United Nations Commission on the Status of Women


Problems akin to slavery which affect women in particular receive continued attention from the Commission on the Status of Women, and have featured in the debates, conclusions and recommendations of the World Conferences of the United Nations Decade for Women in Mexico City, Copenhagen and Nairobi. The Commission submits information to the Working Group on Contemporary Forms of Slavery.


United Nations Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Branch


In its study of child victimization, including trafficking in and the sale of children, this branch of the United Nations identifies four fields of counteraction by the machinery of justice. These are prevention; treatment and redress for victims; legal sanctions for alleged offenders; and treatment and rehabilitation of offenders.


International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL)


INTERPOL provides information on slavery-like practices to the Working Group under a co-operative arrangement with the United Nations.


Information has included the report of the 1988 International Symposium on Traffic in Human Beings, where child pornography was discussed. The symposium urged law enforcement agencies to give priority to investigations into the international market for pornographic material with the emphasis on the welfare of the child. It was recommended that prevention of the sexual abuse of children should be included in the public awareness campaigns of law enforcement agencies.


INTERPOL is making a study of ways to improve international co-operation in preventing and punishing offences against minors, and will communicate the results to the Working Group.


A role for everyone


The essential base of international covenants, national legislation and enforcement procedures is established, but long experience has shown that official action alone will not stamp out slavery in its various forms. Attitudes and customs often deep-rooted-must change.


People moved by the plight of the victims of modern forms of slavery-particularly where children are concerned-are constantly writing to the United Nations. In their letters they often ask the question: "What can I do?"


The answer is that everyone has a contribution to make to a world order which no longer tolerates inhumane exploitation. There are many things that can be done at the national and local levels, by associations and by individuals.


Here are a few suggestions:


Help to set up national commissions to protect and promote human rights, particularly those of people in the most vulnerable groups, which include children, women, indigenous peoples, and debt-bonded labourers.


Encourage religious and lay organizations to be active in making their members and the public aware of the inhumane character of widely current forms of exploitation.


Propose, through parent-teacher associations, that schools use various techniques, including art exhibitions and essay competitions, to bring home the damaging consequences of slavery-like practices.


Organize national art competitions for school children, with the winning entries used to illustrate posters and postage stamps.


On Human Rights Day, 10 December (anniversary of the proclamation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948), use the occasion to focus attention on problems of exploitation through slavery-like practices. Concerts could be organized to raise funds for development projects, for advocacy services, training programmes and the establishment of schools.


Seek to interest the media-television, radio, newspapers and magazines-in dealing with the issues of exploitation in entertainment as well as in the service of information they provide.


Enlist the help of public personalities in their media appearances to promote respect for human rights and to make audiences conscious of the problems of exploitation.

Raise the level of concern over exploitative practices and their consequences for the health and development of the people involved, among groups which defend the interests of women, consumers and the tourist industry.

Campaign with these and other groups for a special mark or label on certain goods to certify that they have not been produced with child labour. The same groups could help to educate consumers to demand only labelled products.

Campaign for the ratification of international human rights covenants and Conventions in countries where this action has not yet been taken.

Printed at United Nations, Geneva
June 1991
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 05:05 pm
Report from Council of Europe:

Domestic slavery

Doc. 9102
17 May 2001

Report
Committee on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men
Rapporteur: Mr John Connor, Ireland, Group of the European People's Party


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Summary

In the last years, domestic slavery has appeared in Europe. This new form of enslavement forces thousands of victims to work without any real financial reward and is a violation of human rights and human dignity.

The Assembly deplores the fact that a considerable number of victims work for diplomats or international civil servants who, under the Vienna Convention of 1961, enjoy immunity.

The Assembly recommends namely to the governments of member states, so that immunity will not be synonymous with impunity, to amend the Vienna Convention of 1961 and to foresee in their criminal codes the recognition of slavery as an offence.

It also recommends to the Committee of Ministers to draw up a domestic workers? charter of rights.

I. Draft recommendation [link to adopted text]

1. In the last few years, a new form of slavery has appeared in Europe, namely domestic slavery. It has been established that more than 4 million women are sold each year in the world.

2. In this connection, the Assembly recalls and reaffirms Article 4§1 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR), which prohibits slavery and servitude, and also the definition of slavery derived from the opinions and judgments of the European Commission of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights.

3. The Assembly also recalls Article 3 of the ECHR, which provides that no one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and Article 6, which proclaims the right of access to a court in civil and criminal matters, including cases where the employer enjoys immunity from jurisdiction.

4. The Assembly also refers to the European Conventions on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters (1959) and Extradition (1967), and the European Agreement on ?Au Pair? Placement (1969).

5. The Assembly notes that the victims? passports are systematically confiscated, leaving them in a situation of total vulnerability with regard to their employers, and sometimes in a situation bordering on imprisonment, where they are subjected to physical and/or sexual violence.

6. Most of the victims of this new form of slavery are in an illegal situation, and have been recruited by agencies, having first borrowed money to pay for their journey.

7. The physical and emotional isolation in which the victims find themselves, coupled with fear of the outside world, causes psychological problems which persist after their release and leave them completely disoriented.

8. The Assembly also deplores the fact that a considerable number of victims work in embassies or in the homes of international civil servants who, under the Vienna Convention of 1961, enjoy immunity from jurisdiction and enforcement, and are covered by the principle of inviolability of persons and property.

9. The Assembly regrets that none of the Council of Europe member states expressly make domestic slavery an offence in their criminal codes.

10. The Assembly accordingly recommends that the Committee of Ministers ask the governments of member states to:

i. make slavery and trafficking in human beings, and also forced marriage, offences in their criminal codes;

ii. strengthen border controls and harmonise policies for police co-operation, essentially for the minors;

iii. amend the Vienna Convention in order to waive diplomatic immunity for all offences committed in private life;

iv. sign and ratify the Convention against Transnational Organised Crime and its additional protocols (December 2000).

v. protect the rights of victims of domestic slavery by:

a. generalising the issuing of temporary and renewable resident permits on humanitarian grounds;

b. taking steps to provide them with protection and with social, administrative and legal assistance;

c. taking steps for their rehabilitation and their reintegration ;

d. developing specific programmes for their protection ;

e. increasing victims? time limits for bringing proceedings against offence of slavery;

f. establishing compensation funds for the victims of slavery;........


Full report here: http://assembly.coe.int/Documents/WorkingDocs/doc01/EDOC9102.htm

International convention against slavery - and lots of other info here:

http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/ev.php-URL_ID=22764&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html

Account of Bales' book - mentioned above: http://dannyreviews.com/h/Disposable_People.html
0 Replies
 
panzade
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 05:07 pm
BM
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 05:08 pm
Beebs story from 2001 - with a mark for countries relating to their effortsd against modern slavery:

US decries 'modern-day slavery'

Human trafficking has reached staggering proportions, affecting more than 700,000 people a year, a US State Department report says.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell presented the first annual report, Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act, at a press conference on Thursday.

Most of the victims of trafficking are women and children, the report says.

Some are duped, answering advertisements to work in a new country and finding themselves virtual prisoners once they arrive.

Others are coerced by criminals or are sold into a modern form of slavery by a relative, an acquaintance or even a family friend.

The report estimates that 45,000 to 50,000 people are trafficked annually through the United States, a transit rather than destination point.



Mr Powell said a special task force would be set up in the United States "to safeguard the vulnerable, to punish the traffickers, to care for their victims and to prevent future trafficking".

Victims worldwide "are subjected to threats against their person and family, violence, horrific living conditions and dangerous workplaces," the report says.

They end up working as cheap labour, some on construction sites, others in clothing factories and many in brothels.

US Secretary of State Colin Powell called the practice an "abomination against humanity" and said Washington would work to put an end to it.

The report lists the root causes for trafficking as "greed, moral turpitude, economics, political instability and transition and social factors".

Countries not complying

Many countries are working to end the problem, the report says, but it lists 23 that are failing to do so.

Among them, in "tier three", the lowest category, are close American allies, including Greece, Israel, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and Turkey.

Israel, the report says, is a destination point mainly for women trafficked from former Soviet states, Brazil, Turkey, South Africa and Asia.

But the report notes that the Israeli Government has "begun to take some steps" to combat the problem.

The report says that in Saudi Arabia, some expatriate workers were "forced into domestic servitude and sexual exploitation".

It describes Greece as a transit and destination point and says the country "has not yet acknowledged publicly that trafficking is a problem".

Countries trying

"Tier two" includes 47 countries that have failed to meet minimum standards, but are trying. This category includes China, France and Japan.

And "tier one" countries are those that have been prosecuting perpetrators of illegal trade and protecting victims.

Britain, Canada, Germany and Hong Kong were in this section, along with Austria, Belgium, Colombia, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland and Taiwan.

Under legislation passed by the US Congress last year, countries have until 2003 to show that they are serious about ending the practice, otherwise Washington may impose sanctions against them.

"Tier three" countries
Albania
Bahrain
Belarus
Bosnia-Hercegovina
Burma
Democratic Republic of Congo
Gabon
Greece
Indonesia
Israel
Kazakstan
Lebanon
Malaysia
Pakistan
Qatar
Romania
Russia
Saudi Arabia
South Korea
Sudan
Turkey
United Arab Emirates
Yugoslavia

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/1436329.stm
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 05:13 pm
Info on child labour:

http://www.hrw.org/children/labor.htm

Bonded labour:

http://www.antislavery.org/homepage/campaign/bondedinfo.htm

International Labour Organization report on forced labour in Brazil:

http://www.ilo.org/public/portugue/region/ampro/brasilia/tbesc_english/brasil/agenda/agenda.htm

I am off to look at Oz - I know we have busted several rings importing Asian women in for prostitution - who have then been kept in conditions of effective slavery while they pay off their importers - presumably hoping to be released into the illegal economy when they have paid off their debt.
0 Replies
 
Noddy24
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 05:33 pm
Last year a local lawyer was indited for keeping his mail order bride in conditions amounting to slavery.

Not only was she expected to put in 18 hour days as a cook and cleaning woman, but after she had soothed her masters jangled nerves so he could sleep she was booted out of the bedroom to sleep on the kitchen floor.
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 05:48 pm
(Hu)Man that is born of woman is inclined to evil as the sparks fly upward?
0 Replies
 
Noddy24
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Nov, 2004 07:48 pm
I know woman is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward.

On he other hand, the lawyer's sister lived under the same roof, supervised the house work and insisted that her brother was being railroaded--foreign women all needed civilized training. Then she was charged as well.
0 Replies
 
Don1
 
  1  
Reply Thu 11 Nov, 2004 04:37 am
Successive British governments have done nothing to eradicate slavery in Britain usually among the immigrant population, if a country like Britain makes no attempt to eradicate it the chances of ending it worldwide dont even represent a pipe dream.

In this country if a man has any kind of sexual contact with a child he is quite rightly prosecuted as a paedophile, if someone from an arab nation takes a "bride" aged eleven it's "their way"

When a young asian girl has to marry someone she has never met and may well find repugnant, it's none of our business because it's "their way"

Where human rights are concerned Britain should hang it's head in shame for standing by and allowing these medievel practices to continue.
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 11 Nov, 2004 04:49 am
Sigh - difficult issues.
0 Replies
 
PamO
 
  1  
Reply Tue 16 Nov, 2004 11:32 am
I am embarrassed for humanity at times...

Here is a simple answer from a woman who is only a mom and housewife: No. We will never be rid of slavery. I promise.
0 Replies
 
 

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