British Children Trafficked For Sex Or Forced Labour Surges

Huge Increase In Number Of British Children Being Trafficked
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The number of British children reported as being trafficked for sex or forced labour within the UK has surged in the last year, as high-profile abuse cases in Rotherham and Rochdale boost awareness of the crime.

Britain was the most prevalent country of origin for potential child victims of human trafficking in 2013, with more than 128 child victims identified, a three-fold increase on the 38 found in the previous year, the National Crime Agency (NCA) said.

The stark increase comes as the overall number of potential human trafficking victims identified in the UK, including adults and children from all countries, also jumped 22% in 2013 to 2,744.

The NCA said it had received emerging intelligence reports that human trafficking victims were being branded "like cattle" with tattoos to signify ownership or their age.

Liam Vernon, head of the NCA's United Kingdom Human Trafficking Centre (UKHTC), said reports of wide-scale abuse by gangs in towns such as Rotherham, Rochdale and Oxford were behind a spike in child victims being identified.

"There's more awareness through all the cases we've seen reported in the UK over the last three or four years," he said.

"There's more joined up and co-ordinated national policing and partnership work around child sexual exploitation in general."

Mr Vernon went on: "It has nothing to do with crossing borders. Trafficking is recruitment or movement in the case of a child for the purpose of exploitation.

"Exploitation can include exploitation for prostitution, other forms of sex exploitation, forced labour, slavery, or servitude."

He added: "Focusing on the UK nationals, any movement or recruitment for any one of those types of UK trafficking. So with UK girls, we see them groomed, we see them recruited, we see them moved around, we see them kept by gangs for sexual exploitation, gratification, or financial gain.

"For UK men, we see that happen, recruited by abduction, fear, controlled, for purpose of slavery, for purpose of labour."

A total of 602 child victims of trafficking were identified across all countries of origin, with 65% girls and 30% boys - the remaining 5% were unrecorded. The most common form of exploitation for girls was sex, while for boys it was mainly labour or criminal purposes.

Of the 128 UK national children identified, 112 or 88% were sexually exploited - a huge increase on the previous year.

Among all potential human trafficking victims identified, Romania remains the most prevalent country of origin, followed by Poland and the UK.

Potential victims of trafficking from the UK more than doubled to 193 in the period, the report said.

Some 1,128 people were trafficked for sexual exploitation, some 41% of all victims, while 743 had been recruited for labour exploitation, such as in farms, car washes or factories.

Victims found in car washes were flagged as showing a significant rise, from seven to 30, a more than four-fold increase.

Another significant increase was flagged in the charity bag collection racket, which sees victims work door-to-door fraudulently collecting for charities.

Intelligence had been received that suggests traffickers were marking potential victims with tattoos with "various symbols signifying ownership or to show that a victim is over 18", according to the NCA report.

"Information also suggests that victims may be marked with numbers, but the meaning of these numbers is not known," it said. "Various sources indicate that tattoos are used globally to mark victims of trafficking for sexual exploitation by traffickers and pimps, but the extent to which this is used in the UK is not known."

Commenting on the use of tattoos, Mr Vernon said: ""Put very simply, you brand cattle. And that's how traffickers view people, as a commodity to buy and sell."

He added: "The reason we've made sure it's in there, we want to influence and make aware to front line responders, it may be something that hasn't particularly been looked for previously."

What the report on Rotherham sexual abuse actually said

What the Rotherham abuse report actually says
The Issue Of Ethnicity(01 of06)
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Those on the frontline in fighting child sexual abuse in Rotherham were "acutely aware" of "a general nervousness in the earlier years about discussing them, for fear of being though of racist". Senior people in the council and police conveyed the message that the "ethnic dimensions" of the abuse should be downplayed. But the report also says it was confident that "ethnic issue did not influence professional decision-making in individual cases". Staff had no personal experience of any attempt to influence their decision making over ethnic issues. The failure, by some councillors, to recognise that the 2010 convictions of abusers was part of a deep-rooted problem within the Pakistani-heritage community was "at best naive and at worst ignoring a politically inconvenient truth," the report says. (credit:Imgorthand via Getty Images)
A Lack Of 'Interest' In The Issue(02 of06)
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The council leadership (former council leader Roger Stone pictured) showed "little obvious leadership or interest" in child sexual exploitation, beyond their financial support for Risky Business, an outreach service for children at risk of it. Potential reasons for the lack of interest were "denial it could occur in Rotherham, concern it could damage community cohesion, worry about the reputation risk to the borough". Although the council funded Risky Business, its own Children's Services department regarded the service as "something of a nuisance" and the relationship between the two was tense. (credit:Anna Gowthorpe/PA Wire)
Police 'Did Not Believe' Data About The Problem(03 of06)
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There were three earlier reports on the issue from 2002, 2003 and 2006. They all gave stark evidence to police and the council and "could not have been cleared in their description of the situation". But they failed to convince some. The 2002 report was "effectively suppressed" because senior officers at South Yorkshire Police did not believe the data it presented. The other two reports sought to identify links between child abuse and other crimes such as drugs and guns. The police and the council took no action in response to them. (credit:Dave Thompson/PA Archive)
Senior Leaders Didn't Support Staff(04 of06)
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In the early 2000s, a group of people from safeguarding agencies tried, on their own initiative, to meet to monitor large groups of the children deemed to be at risk of abuse. But senior managers with the police and the council's children's social care thought the scale of the problem, described by youth workers, was exaggerated and offered little help or support. (credit:Mykola Velychko via Getty Images)
Council Children's Services Were Understaffed(05 of06)
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From 2009, Rotherham Council's (chief executive Martin Kimber pictured) children's social care service was "acutely understaffed and overstretched", leaving it struggling to cope with demand. (credit:Dave Higgens/PA Wire)
Policies To Improve The Issue Were Devised - But Not Implemented Well(06 of06)
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New policies on procedures on child sexual exploitation were drawn up to help agencies work together, after Ofsted published a scathing report on the council's children's safeguarding services. But the follow-up in ensuring the policies were implemented was weak. Members of the Rotherham Safeguarding Children Board did not check whether the policies were implemented or working well. "Their challenge and scrutiny was lacking over several years at a time when it was most required," the report says. Roger Stone, who led the council from 2003 until his resignation yesterday, apologised for the safeguarding being so poor. The report is less than forgiving: "This apology should have been made years earlier and the issue given the political leadership it needed." (credit:monkeybusinessimages via Getty Images)