Slavery
is illegal in almost every nation on earth but slavery still exists everywhere.
Apr
302014
Today,
people are living in slavery in countries all around the world. Slavery is
hidden away in factories, on farms, and behind closed doors, in homes and other
places in the cities and towns of the world’s richest and poorest nations. But
with the power of a worldwide movement, social networks, and technologies, we
can expose these hidden crimes – so that ours is the last generation that needs
to fight the trade in human lives.
Slavery
is illegal in almost every nation on earth but slavery still exists everywhere.
No matter
where you are, it’s close to home. Modern slavery affects people in the world’s
richest and the world’s poorest countries, within borders and across borders. Slavery
can trap thousands in one place – like mines and factories – or happen at a
small scale, where a single girl is trapped in a stranger’s home and forced to
work without pay. Source:
U.S. State Department
It
is estimated that at least 29.8 million
people are forced to live in slavery around the world today.
Many
people think slavery was abolished years ago. But there are more people living
in slavery today than the total number of people taken from Africa to America
in the vast trans-Atlantic slave trade between the 17th and 19th centuries. And
even a single person is one person too many. Source: Global Slavery Index 2013
The
victims of slavery can be as young as
five or six years old.
Young
children have their childhoods stolen from them. Teenagers who reach for a
better life can find themselves tricked into accepting the offer of a job far
away that turns into the nightmare of slavery. Slavery is our generation’s
problem – and our generation must provide the solution. Source: International Organisation for
Migration
Modern
slavery generates profit of over US $32
billion for slaveholders.
Modern slavery
is profitable, generating at least US$32 billion in profits every year – more
than the entire output of Iceland, Nicaragua, Rwanda, and Mongolia combined.
And it isn’t just a problem in distant, poor countries; nearly half the total,
an estimated $15.5 billion, is made in wealthy industrialized countri


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