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Ten Million Victims Go Missing from India Slavery Report

  • Published on
    July 23, 2018
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    Anti-Slavery Activists, Child Slavery, Debt Bondage, Domestic Slavery, Forced Labor, Forced Marriage, Human Trafficking, Law & Policy, Prevention, Rehabilitation & Liberation, Supply Chain
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The new 2018 Global Slavery Index reports a significant change in the number of victims of modern slavery in India, dropping sharply to 8 million victims this year. Just two years ago, the reported number was 18 million.

The difference of ten million is attributed to a change in survey methodology according to the Walk Free Foundation, which publishes the GSI.

Related Campaign: Help stop trafficking from West Bengal.

However, some anti-trafficking campaigners worry that the new estimate is too low, and the abrupt change implies that the Indian government has done exceptionally well in combating the crime.

“This new data could just be interpreted as India tackling the problem well,” said Venkat Reddy of the Mamidipudi Venkatarangaiya Foundation, which works on child rights and slavery issues in India.

“We are diluting the enormity of the problem by not giving the accurate figure.”

Thomson Reuters Foundation reports:

The Walk Free Foundation attributed its new, lower estimate to a different method of measuring responses to its survey questions.

The 2018 index included respondents who reported experiencing slavery “on any given day” in 2016 alone, while the previous survey recorded victims who were exploited at any time during the previous five years.

The new calculation also included only those who experienced slavery inside India, which eliminated anyone who suffered exploitation abroad as a migrant labourer.

Reports of abuse and exploitation are particularly common from the six Gulf states – Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Oman – where 6 million Indian migrants work, according to government data.

Chandan Kumar, of the National Campaign Committee for Eradication of Bonded Labour, pointed to a gap between the GSI statistic and the Indian government’s estimate.

“The Indian government itself said it would rescue 18 million bonded workers by 2030. And this does not include victims of forced marriage and sexual slavery, so the numbers are clearly much higher,” Kumar said.

Still, Fiona David, the Walk Free Foundation’s executive director of global research, says that the improved methodology is reliable.

“The figure shows the problem is enormous. We have a better picture of it now,” she said.

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Paulette Harvey
Paulette Harvey
6 years ago

One person in slavery is one to many, 8 million even if this lower figure is the true figure is obscene

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