Wales Assembly Question Time: Leader of the House and Chief Whip: Modern Slavery and Trafficking - Nov 14
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Rhianon Passmore AM: Will the Leader of the House make a
statement on Welsh Government action to end modern slavery and
trafficking in south-east Wales? Julie James AM: Thank
you for that very important question. We are determined to make all
parts of Wales hostile to slavery. We are working with Police
and Crime Commissioners and with our multi-agency...Request free trial
Rhianon Passmore
AM: Will the Leader of the House make a
statement on Welsh Government action to end modern slavery and
trafficking in south-east Wales?
Julie James
AM: Thank you for that very
important question. We are determined to make all parts
of Wales hostile to slavery. We are working
with Police and Crime
Commissioners and with our multi-agency
partners to protect vulnerable people and put an end to
this heinous crime.
Rhianon Passmore
AM: Thank you. The Welsh
Government's anti-slavery co-ordinator has stated that
raising awareness of modern slavery is key to tackling
the issue. What do the latest figures on the number of
cases reported tell us about the scale of the problem and
the awareness of members of the public in recognising
slavery and also in more victims coming forward? As we
know, modern slavery does increasingly exist in our
society both hidden and in plain sight, sometimes in
mundane establishments such as nail bars and car washes,
but equally in agriculture, catering, hotel trades and
caring professions, and, of course, prostitution.
Julie James
AM: Yes, indeed. The latest
figures on the reported cases of slavery in Wales are
telling us that we are now beginning to understand the
true scale of this problem and that our multi-agency
approach to gathering intelligence and raising awareness
is, indeed, working. In Wales in 2017, there were 192
people identified as potential victims of slavery and
referred into the national referral mechanism, which is
operated by the National Crime Agency. But, just in the
first six months of this year, 116 people have been
referred into the national referral mechanism and there's
no sign of a slowdown in this year-on-year increase in
referrals. Of the 116 referrals this year in Wales, the
highest number of referrals were UK nationals, and that
was 42 women, men and children, and the other main
sources were countries from all over the world, in fact.
They included 46 women and 70 men; 65 were referred for
adult exploitation and 51 for exploitation as a minor.
The Member made an excellent point about it being in plain sight, because a large number of these young people, in particular, have been caught up in the county lines crime, particularly teenage boys who are UK nationals, but we are also dealing with girls as young as two who have been rescued from sexual exploitation. Currently, labour exploitation is, however, the main form of exploitation, followed by sexual exploitation and domestic servitude. From the reported cases, we know that often people are held in that kind of captivity in plain sight. A large number of people knew that they were there but hadn't recognised the symptoms. So, the Member's quite right to say that we can all play our part in tackling slavery by raising awareness of what the signs are, what to look out for and how to report that into the mechanisms.
David Melding
AM: Can I commend the work of the St
Giles Trust, who presented yesterday to the all-party
group on looked-after children about the county lines
project that is running in co-operation with a project in
Gwent? We heard really alarming evidence of how these
drug rings use looked-after children, care leavers and,
of course, lots of other vulnerable people, and it's
really important that those trapped in this sort of
criminal activity realise that if they come forward
as victims of modern slavery or human trafficking,
they'll be supported and it'll be the larger, vast crime
of their imprisonment in some terrible way—and we've
heard some of the examples that are used—by these gangs
that the police will focus on and prosecute.
Julie James
AM: Yes, indeed, and we've done
a lot of work. The Gwent police and crime
commissioner, who's a well-known and regarded previous
colleague of ours, has been very active, and members of
the leadership group. And now, actually, all of the
police forces of Wales have active groups in this area,
but he was very much at the forefront of that and he
funded a number of anti-slavery awareness-raising
conferences, and he jointly hosted the event that my
colleague Joyce Watson AM held at the Senedd,
which was called 'making our collective commitment to
eradicating modern slavery and human trafficking', which
was attended by a number of Assembly Members, including
David Melding. That was making that
exact point, and I've also made that point to a number of
UK Government Ministers when I've met with them. But what
we have to be sure of is that we don't have any
unintended consequences that prevent people from coming
forward, thinking that they will be prosecuted themselves
for some minor involvement in whatever activity and
masking out the bigger problem. That is a very good case
in point that he makes—the one where you've been involved
in some kind of drug issue and, therefore, you think
you're liable to prosecution and don't come forward—but
there are many others where people think that they are
falling foul of the immigration rules or a number of
other things, and we've been at great pains to ensure
that people see the bigger crime behind the front
and also see the crime ring behind the individual who is
caught up in it.
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