651,110 Ethiopians live in Modern Slavery: Research
Sodere Team has compiled a few data points about Ethiopia. You can
According
to global slavery index released on Thursday, close to 30 million
people in the world live in modern slavery and out of which 651,110 are
Ethiopians.
download the report below.
By Belinda Goldsmith
(Reuters)
- Nearly 30 million people are living in slavery across the globe, many
of them men, women and children trafficked by gangs for sex work and
unskilled labour, according to a global slavery index released on
Thursday.
The
index by anti-slavery charity Walk Free Foundation ranked 162 countries
on the number living in slavery, the risk of enslavement, and the
strength of government responses to combating the illegal activity.
It
found that 10 countries accounted for 76 percent of the 29.8 million
people living in slavery - India, China, Pakistan, Nigeria, Ethiopia,
Russia, Thailand, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Myanmar and
Bangladesh.
Modern
slavery was defined as human trafficking, forced labour, and practices
such as debt bondage, forced marriage, and the sale or exploitation of
children.
Researcher
Kevin Bales said he hoped the index, the first annual report to monitor
slavery globally, would raise public awareness as numbers were at an
all-time high and it would increase pressure on governments to take more
action.
He
dismissed the view that poverty was the key factor behind slavery and
instead blamed corruption, calling for laws to stop organised gangs.
"Consistently
when we analysed the statistics we found that corruption came out as
more powerful than poverty in driving slavery," said Bales, a professor
of contemporary slavery at the Wilberforce Institute for the Study of
Slavery and Emancipation at the University of Hull in northern England.
"Fundamentally this is a violent crime issue."
The
report found Mauritania in West Africa had the highest number of slaves
proportionately, with up to 160,000 enslaved in a population of 3.8
million, due to culturally-sanctioned forms of chattel slavery and high
levels of child marriage.
The highest absolute numbers were almost 14 million in slavery in India and 3 million in China.
"By
far the largest proportion of this problem (in India) is the
exploitation of Indian citizens within India itself, particularly
through debt bondage and bonded labour," said the report.
In
China there was forced labour of men, women and children, including
domestic servitude and forced begging, sexual exploitation of women and
children and forced marriage.
Coming last in the index were Iceland, Ireland and Britain although Bales stressed they were not slavery-free.
Up
to 4,400 people are estimated to be enslaved in Britain, the victims
mainly from Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe. They are forced into sex
work, domestic servitude, or low-paid jobs in agriculture, construction,
restaurants and nail salons.
"Hopefully this report will be a wake-up call for rich countries as well," Bales told Reuters.
(Reporting by Belinda Goldsmith; editing by Andrew Roche)
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