Nearly 36 million people worldwide, or 0.5% of the world's
population, live as slaves, a survey by anti-slavery campaign group Walk Free says. India has the most slaves overall and Mauritania has the highest
percentage. In 2012, the International Labour Organisation estimated that almost
21 million people were victims of forced labour.
The report defines slaves as people subject to forced
labour, debt bondage, trafficking, sexual exploitation for money and forced or
servile marriage. It uses slavery in a modern sense of the term, rather than as
a reference to the broadly outlawed traditional practice where people were held
in bondage and treated as another person's property.
According to the report, more than 14 million people live as
slaves in India. Next in the index comes China, with more than 3 million
slaves, followed by Pakistan, Uzbekistan. Russia is ranked fifth. The country's
economy is said to rely on enslaved migrant workers in the construction and
agricultural sectors.
Mauritania meanwhile has the highest number of slaves as a
proportion of the population, at 4%. Many people in the African country inherit
their slave status from their ancestors.
Child labour has been reported in all the major cotton
growing countries - China, India, Pakistan, Brazil, Uzbekistan and Turkey. Many
household-name retailers concede they do not know exactly how the cotton they
use is farmed and processed. Yet, for years, labour activists here have
campaigned for their help. Usually companies track their supply chain to the
spinning mills, while high street retailers track back to their immediate
suppliers. Little or no scrutiny is made of the ginning factories and cotton
fields.
Top five countries with the highest proportion of slaves
Mauritania - 4%
Uzbekistan - 3.97%
Haiti - 2.3%
Qatar - 1.36%
India - 1.14%
No comments:
Post a Comment