WORLD SOCIALIST MOVEMENT |
Campaigners against a new immigration bill say proposed
crackdown on illegal working will make trafficking victims reluctant to come
forward for fear of deportation or destitution. In May, David Cameron promised
a clampdown on illegal migration across all areas of government to “make the UK
a less attractive place for illegal migrants”. Cameron said this would be done
by “rooting out illegal immigrants and bolstering deportations”.
The bill due to have its first reading in the House of Lords
this week, will hand “unbelievable control to traffickers” and make it harder
for people to escape slavery in the UK, campaigners have warned. Anti-slavery
NGOs and labour rights activists said a climate of fear around immigration
would result in trafficking victims being treated as illegal workers rather
than victims of crime. A key proposal in the bill concerns illegal working,
which will carry a 12-month sentence and unlimited fine. Trafficking experts
said this would deter victims from coming forward to report abuse.
Caroline Robinson, policy director at the Focus on Labour
Exploitation (Flex), said: “We have serious concerns that the immigration bill
will make people more vulnerable. The proposed legislation hands unbelievable
control to traffickers. The purpose of this illegal working offence is to find
people and get them out of the country and our fear is that victims won’t want
to come forward because of the immigration consequences.” Robinson said her
organisation had already seen the impact of tougher immigration policies, with
victims of trafficking too scared to approach authorities.
Under the proposed bill, banks would be required to
establish whether customers were in the UK legally and landlords would have to
check tenants’ documents regularly. If landlords believed a tenant to be in the
UK illegally, they would be able to evict them without a court order.
Chai Patel, legal and policy director for the Joint Council
for the Welfare of Immigrants, believes that the measures in the bill
threatened to undo the work of the Modern Slavery Act, introduced last year. He
said: “It’s already a criminal offence to be here unlawfully but now the powers
will be extensive. They can seize anything you earn, take whatever people have.
Victims [of trafficking] will be admitting a criminal offence just by saying
they have been exploited. That is what traffickers rely on and they can rightly
say you can’t tell anyone because you will be arrested and put in prison, and
that is what might well happen. It really does contradict everything in the
modern slavery bill.”
Anti-trafficking groups have branded the protection system
inadequate. The government has also faced criticisms over its record of
persistently criminalising victims of trafficking.
“If the new immigration legislation is effectively going to
strengthen the position of traffickers, it is difficult to see how the NRM [national
referral mechanism (NRM), the main system for identifying and protecting victims
of trafficking in the UK] is going to be an adequate response to that,” said
Aidan McQuade, director of Anti-Slavery International. McQuade complained of an
“inbuilt institutional racism” in the NRM system, with migrants from EU
countries much more likely to be confirmed as trafficking victims than those
from elsewhere. “You have less than a 20% chance if you’re from outside the EU
of being positively identified as a victim of trafficking,” said McQuade. “It’s
hard to see how the current climate around immigration is going to do anything
to counteract that.”
The Labour MP Fiona Mactaggart said pressure to leave the UK
after a positive identification as a trafficking victim has stopped people
entering the NRM process: “If people are trafficked they usually have 45 days
after the [Home Office] decision [to stay in the UK], then they are dropped
like a stone. The problem is that someone who has been a victim of trafficking,
often for many reasons, cannot return to their country of origin, for example
because their traffickers are threatening them and their families. Too often
they try to find something to preserve their lives and so they might work
illegally or they might revert to prostitution, simply because they need to
eat. Because of hysteria around immigration we allow profoundly vulnerable
people to drop off the edge and they can’t give evidence against cruel,
monstrous criminals.”
PROTECT PEOPLE, NOT BORDERS |
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