At least 21 million people are
victims of human trafficking, the UN Secretary-General António Guterres
said on Wednesday, adding that the traffickers are smiling to the bank
with $150billion every year.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres says that human traffickers smile to the bank with $150billion every year.
Guterres,
who made the remarks at the ‘Ministerial Open Debate on Trafficking in
Persons in Conflict Situations: Forced labour, slavery and other
similar practices’ organised by the Security Council, condemned the
rising cases of human trafficking and describing it as appalling.
The
UN scribe estimated that traffickers made $150 billion annually
through different forms of human trafficking and called for strong
efforts to stop the evil trade.
“The
International Labour Organisation reports that 21 million people around
the world are victims of forced labour and extreme exploitation. Annual
profits are estimated to be 150 billion dollars.
“Beyond
these numbers is the human toll – the lives cut short, the families and
societies torn apart, the gross violations of human rights and
international humanitarian law,” Guterres lamented.
The UN chief explained that human
trafficking took many forms, pointing out that “women and girls in
particular are targeted again and again and again”.
“We
see brutal sexual exploitation, including forced prostitution, forced
marriage and slavery. We see the appalling trade in human organs.
“Let
us also remember that modern manifestations may touch and even
implicate us all. Global supply-chains have transformed many lives for
the better – but not always without costs.
“In
some situations – clothes, food, smartphones, jewelry and other
consumer goods may bear, wittingly or unwittingly, the traces of
exploitation.
“Gleaming new skyscrapers may owe some of their shine to the sweat of bonded labourers,” he said.
According
to him, human trafficking thrives where the rule of law is weak or
nonexistent, while situations of armed conflict are especially virulent
breeding grounds for human trafficking.
“In
some of today’s conflicts, we are confronted by armed groups that not
only openly engage in enslavement and forced labour, but actually argue
that it is legal.
“In Syria, Daesh has organized
slave markets and even published manuals instructing its fighters on
how to capture, control and trade enslaved women and girls.
“The leaders of Boko Haram have also argued that slavery is legal.
“In
other conflicts, other groups force men, women and children under their
control to labour in unsafe mines, as porters and domestic servants,
and on the frontlines.”
Guterres
said smugglers often coerced and manipulated individuals for profit and
make them victims of labour trafficking while terrorists and violent
extremists used sexual enslavement as a tool for recruitment.
Drug
traffickers use kidnapping and ransom to finance their operations.
Criminal gangs force unaccompanied children into a life of petty crime,
he added.
He, however, noted UNODC’s
December 2016 Global Report on Trafficking in Persons, that there are
hardly any convictions for crimes related to human trafficking in
conflict situations or elsewhere.
Guterres
warned that the lack of aggressive investigations and prosecutions only
adds to the injustice, allows perpetrators to function without fear,
fuels corruption and creates widespread disillusion.
NAIJ
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