Evidence session: Wednesday 23 April,
2.15pm
From 2.15pm
- Phillip Holiday, Central Region Director, Border Force
-
, Independent Anti-Slavery
Commissioner
- Alex Murray, Director of Threat Leadership, National Crime
Agency
The Joint Committee on Human Rights continues its inquiry into
forced labour in UK supply chains on Wednesday 23 April when it
takes evidence from Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner, and senior officials in
Border Force and the National Crime Agency.
The Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner is responsible for
encouraging best practice among the agencies and organisations
tasked with tackling modern slavery and human trafficking. The
National Crime Agency was established to lead the UK's fight
against serious, organised and complex crime and provide a new
focus on economic crime, while Border Force secures the UK's
border by carrying out customs controls of goods entering the
UK.
The session will focus on the UK's legislative and regulatory
framework for dealing with the risks of forced labour in supply
chains. It will examine the practical measures taken by law
enforcement to uncover wrong-doing in supply chains and prevent
goods made using forced labour from entering the UK. It will also
investigate how agencies collaborate and ask if the UK's response
would be improved by the establishment of a dedicated
agency.