Extracts from PMQs: Modern Slavery - Mar 14
Wednesday, 14 March 2018 16:08
Anne Marie Morris (Newton Abbot) (Con) First, may I congratulate
the Prime Minister on her pioneering work in fighting modern-day
slavery? However, has she been advised that a central plank of her
law enforcement policy is not working, with 65 prosecutions of
traffickers abandoned last year because victims feared for their
safety and no reparations orders made against convicted
traffickers...Request free trial
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First, may I congratulate the Prime Minister on her
pioneering work in fighting modern-day slavery? However,
has she been advised that a central plank of her law
enforcement policy is not working, with 65 prosecutions
of traffickers abandoned last year because victims feared
for their safety and no reparations orders made against
convicted traffickers to compensate victims for their
ordeals?
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I thank my hon. Friend for raising this important issue.
At the meeting of the modern slavery taskforce that I
chaired recently—two weeks ago, I think it was—in which I
have brought together people not only from across
government, but from law enforcement, criminal justice
more generally and other areas to look at how we are
working on this issue, we were addressing exactly how we
can ensure that more prosecutions go ahead in future and
perpetrators are brought to justice.
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Q11. Shockingly, in 2017 in this country, 2,120
children were identified as potential victims of child
slavery. I know of the Prime Minister’s personal
commitment to tackling this issue, but surely we ought to
have more data. We have no idea how many of those
children go missing. We have no idea how many are
deported. We have no idea how many are re-trafficked. In
2018, in this country, a modern democracy, that is simply
not good enough. Will the Prime Minister tell us what she
is going to do about it? [904370]
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The hon. Gentleman has raised a very important issue. It
has been a concern for a long time that we sometimes see
children who have been identified as the victims of
slavery and of human trafficking in a position, sadly, of
being taken out by traffickers and resubmitted to the
horrible circumstances that that brings to them. On the
point he is making about asylum and deportation, we do
not return unaccompanied children who do not qualify for
asylum or humanitarian protection unless we can confirm
that safe and adequate reception programmes and
arrangements are in place in their home country. If we
cannot confirm such arrangements, we grant temporary
leave until the child is 17 and a half. Last October, we
confirmed our commitment to rolling out independent child
trafficking advocates across the country. This is a
system we piloted previously, which will give support to
those child victims to ensure that they are given the
support they need and that they do not fall back into the
hands of traffickers.
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